Mike Szabo was leaning against a wall near the bathroom at Tetherow Resort’s Event Pavilion in 2013, debating his next move. Having relocated to Bend from San Diego just five months before, he had decided to step back from his professional life as a landscape architect.
With a pregnant wife and young child, he briefly considered taking a job as a server in a restaurant until he realized that “this whole server thing wasn’t going to work—we needed to make more money to support the family.” He decided to go back to the profession he was trained in.
Before the move, Szabo had designed DIRECTV’s corporate campus in Los Angeles as well as a big pedestrian mall for the University of California San Diego. Yet, even with 12 years of experience, he was unable to find work as a landscape architect in Central Oregon. “I was cold calling architects and developers. No one seemed to want to give me a shot,” he recalled. “It was disheartening. We’d burned through all of our life savings.” With no design projects, he called a temp agency, who sent him on jobs pulling weeds and assembling office furniture.
A Tetherow Resort Introduction
Nearly out of hope, he continued to attend professional networking events, including one that fateful day at Tetherow Resort where Bend architect Darren Thomas was receiving an award. After the presentation, Szabo sought Thomas out, but was disappointed when he couldn’t find him. About to head home, he saw Thomas walking out of the bathroom. “I introduced myself, and he said, ‘Oh, you are on my to-do list to call, and I actually have a couple of projects I want to talk with you about. Come to my office tomorrow.’”
“That was it. He gave me one residence in Tetherow and a new retail and office building in NorthWest Crossing where Washington [Kitchen and Cocktails] is located. He also introduced me to Tetherow’s owners, Erin and Chris van der Velde, who asked me to do some projects for them, including a new sports center and swimming pool for the resort,” he said.
SZABO Landscape Architecture Launches
In 2014, SZABO Landscape Architecture opened as a design firm primarily focused on work in Central Oregon, though the team takes on a diverse range of projects. “We do everything beyond the building footprint—from hardscapes, site lighting, planting design, irrigation design, grading and drainage design, to site amenities like pools, spas, decks, firepits and outdoor kitchens,” explained Szabo, emphasizing that the firm is a landscape architectural design firm, not a contractor.
Just two years after its inception, the firm had more work than Szabo could handle, prompting him to seek support from former colleague Brian Nierman. Nierman soon moved his family from Denver to Bend to join SZABO. The firm currently occupies an upstairs studio space in downtown Bend and has four additional team members with backgrounds in landscape architecture or design, along with marketing assistance from Elizabeth Hanley Szabo.
In new home construction, Szabo emphasizes the importance of including the firm as part of the design process from the outset. “Our whole goal is to make the site and architecture complementary and harmonious,” he said. “We rarely take projects where everything is already designed and completed, and we’re just putting the lipstick on,” he explained. “We want to be involved early to consider the site, what the architecture calls for, and how the clients will be using the space. The design is always better when we’re there in the beginning.”
Spring Landscape Renovations in Central Oregon
For spring landscape renovations, it’s best to start the design phase in the fall, Szabo advises. If a homeowner starts in the spring, Szabo says it would be “a big hope to get it installed in the fall, which has more to do with how busy landscape contractors are in this town and less to do with how long our design process takes.”
One change Szabo has noticed in recent years is that people are paying much more attention to their outdoor spaces. “The designs are becoming bigger and more elaborate, with clients saving more of their budget for outdoor spaces,” he said. “To be worth it in Central Oregon, homeowners need to factor in heat and shade to manage our hot summers and cool shoulder seasons.”
After a decade of building a successful landscape architecture firm, Szabo said, ”We’re in the sweet spot of where we want to be. We love Bend and don’t have to drive hours away to projects tucked into faraway neighborhoods or cities,” he said, referring to his practice in California. “The fact that we get to live in this town and create in this town, driving past our projects, taking our families to parks we designed, eating in restaurants and sitting on patios we’ve worked on and getting to be part of shaping what this city looks like is incredibly satisfying,” Szabo continued. “We’ll probably never leave. We love that we see our work come to fruition on a daily basis.”
To see more of SZABO’s work, visit szabo-la.com. See the full Winter 2024 digital issue, including this feature, HERE. Read more from Bend Home + Design Magazine.
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