PEORIA MAGAZINE June 2023

The Doug Hoerr transformed Zimmerman property in north Peoria

HIZZONER TAKES NOTICE Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley also took note of the beautification. Hoerr was recruited to be part of a public/private endeavor to bring horticultural beauty to the medians on Michigan Avenue. The city installed four blocks of planters along the Mag Mile, and three times a year Hoerr selected the vegetation to fill them. It was all completely new to Chicago. “I came in with this sort of natural landscaping that overflowed the planters. It was a unique look. It took a couple of years for people to say ‘Oh, we like that.’” Hoerr kept at it for 25 years. The city kept adding planters, with those initial four Michigan Avenue blocks becoming four miles. More neighborhoods and shopping areas wanted the beautification experience. Today, there are 100 miles of heavily landscaped median strips in the Windy City, and the concept has branched out across the country. Hoerr sees the Michigan Avenue phenomenon as the “defining difference” that got his foot in the door with clients, growing his business. STEVE JOBS REACHES OUT One of the new clients was Apple Inc., which hired Hoerr Schaudt to devise side walk plantings at their first standalone store in Chicago. As the mayor’s recently appointed chairman of the Green Roof Committee, Hoerr approached Apple’s local representatives about putting a green roof on their new store.

architecture, Hoerr returned to Peoria to work with his second cousins Rudy, Jim and John Hoerr at DA Hoerr, the landscape design/build firm now known as Hoerr Nursery. “Basically, I learned the craft of how to landscape from them,” Hoerr said of his nine and a half years there. A TURNING POINT In 1988, at the age of 32, Hoerr decided to leave everything behind and go to England to study the hottest trend in landscaping. “At the time, the rage in all the lifestyle magazines, such as Elle Décor and House Beautiful, was English gardens,” said Hoerr, who wanted to learn more about perennials and layering. “I realized that none of my projects was ever going to be in a magazine.” Hoerr worked with celebrity garden ers John Brookes and Beth Chatto. “It was almost like getting my doctorate in landscape horticulture,” he said. “I ate, drank and slept gardens, doing two or three gardens a week around the country” while lending a student’s ear to the nonstop chats he had with Chatto and Brookes over dinner. After two years, Brookes told Hoerr it was time for him to go home and put his knowledge to work. MIDWEST, MICHIGAN AVENUE BECKON Hoerr chose to open his own landscape architectural firm in Chicago, initially working out of his home in Evanston.

His first job after returning to the United States was landscaping a Peoria home recently purchased by Tom and Mary Ann Zimmerman in Thousand Oaks. Hoerr had landscaped their previous home. Plants, trees, perennials, a sprinkler system, new patio, gravel paths and a walled courtyard were installed. “Doug can look at a site and visualize what it’s going to look like, right away,” said Mary Ann Zimmerman. “He knows what needs to be done and he’s fun to work with.” After a happenstance meeting, the owners of Crate and Barrel asked Hoerr for landscape lighting for their new flagship store on Michigan Avenue. “Michigan Avenue basically had some impatiens and plastic chains and petunias and I didn’t think it was the Magnificent Mile,” said Hoerr. “I mean, horticulturally it wasn’t. “Nature wasn’t really in the city at that time, just some trees along the sidewalk that were healthy or maybe not,” said Hoerr, who suggested that Crate and Barrel go all in for landscaping around the store. The owners agreed. “When I did the gardens there at Crate and Barrel, it got a lot of attention,” Hoerr said. “People waiting for the shops to open in the morning started waiting around the gardens in front of Crate and Barrel, not the other stores.” The bountiful horticulture became a “thing” on Michigan avenue, with merchants on Michigan Avenue and then State Street asking Hoerr for landscaping at their stores.

JUNE 2023 PEORIA MAGAZINE 47

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