Our work speaks for itself.
Take a look at a selection of our recent projects, crafted with care and designed to make an impact. Each one tells a story of creativity, collaboration, and results.
The River Bluffs Open Space site is a 160‑acre riparian corridor along the Cache la Poudre River where decades of channelization, drought, and upstream wildfire damage have weakened the watershed’s natural moisture cycle. The restoration design plants 10,000 native trees, shrubs, and live stakes across four ecological zones, rebuilding the riparian buffer, reconnecting the abandoned oxbow, and re‑establishing a functional river‑to‑foothill mosaic. With active irrigation and a full BACI monitoring system, the project measurably improves soil moisture, Vapor Pressure Deficit, wildlife habitat, and groundwater recharge. Over time, this site becomes a long‑term ecological engine that strengthens the region’s atmospheric moisture, biodiversity, and climate resilience
The Lions Open Space and Watson Lake prototype serves as a fully instrumented, 9-acre calibration site designed to restore vital riparian margins and foothill transition ecosystems along the Cache la Poudre River. By establishing a dense palette of 10,000 native plants—including fast-transpiring Fremont Cottonwoods and deeply-rooted Coyote Willows—the project actively stabilizes riverbanks and mitigates critical soil erosion. This precise restoration footprint plays a major scientific role by capturing real-time transpiration and soil moisture data to help combat the regional Front Range water security crisis. Ultimately, the site lowers local vapor pressure deficits and drops stream temperatures, creating a climate-resilient buffer that fosters biodiversity and secures long-term water resources for future generations.