Julie Milligan is still unsure how it all happened. One day she’s a Los Angeles family law attorney, the next she’s created an award-winning landscape on a Santa Monica rooftop. Even stranger still, months later she finds herself waist-deep in Hawaiian earth, digging trenches for a 14-acre garden in Kauai.
“Every day I ask myself, how did I go from a successful divorce lawyer to knowing 80 varieties of palm trees?” said the blond, slightly built Milligan as she sat in her garden recently. “If you had told me four years ago that I would be quitting a 12-year career as a lawyer to install and design gardens, I would have laughed.”
It all started with a few herbs and some citrus trees. Five years ago she jumped at the opportunity to buy the condo next door. Her old place had just a 100-square-foot deck; the new apartment offered 1,600 square feet of outdoor space. The deck, which wraps around her spacious two-bedroom condo, sits atop the roof of the unit below.
Roof gardens, common in dense urban areas such as New York City and San Francisco, are unusual in the suburban sprawl of Southern California. But with real estate prices in the region rising, many buyers are finding it more affordable to forgo the land and cultivate plants on roofs, decks and balconies.