If they can dream it, they can build it.
That might as well be the mantra behind Yee Lee and Bryan Johnsen’s extensive gardens in Champlin that unexpectedly grew into a budding business.
Over the course of just a few years, the couple have created a delightful display of 27 distinct gardens. Landscaping is no afterthought, either, if their most ambitious project yet — a towering stone water feature with spiral staircases, a bridge, 6-foot-high waterfall and a stream — is any indication.
With more than 20,000 plants and a variety of landscapes under their belt, the two recently started to host garden tours during the growing season. They say it’s a way to pass on what they’ve learned about which plants flourish in Minnesota, including the rare hybrid and tropical plants that they especially love.
“We want our gardens to be an example of how you can improve your property over a small period of time,” Johnsen said of their gardens, named a winner in the reader-nominated 2023-2024 Star Tribune Beautiful Gardens contest.
Two peas in a pod
Lee, who is a language interpreter by day, loves to garden in her free time. Growing up in Laos, she learned tricks of the trade from her Hmong community, for whom gardening was an important part of everyday life. As a precision machinist who runs his own company, Johnsen loves everything construction.
The two, who married in 2017, became two peas in a pod working together in the yard.
“She’s the mother of the plants and nurtures all of them, and I’m the builder,” Johnsen said.