Meg Griscom RLA

Associate Principal

Meg’s work is grounded in celebrating geomorphology, hydrology, ecology and community to reveal unique histories and illuminate possible futures. Working closely with institutional, residential and public clients, Meg is focused on building shared values and giving voice to communities and ecologies, across all scales of site.

With the practice for over 14 years, Meg’s project work includes managing and implementing Storm King Art Center, a recent masterplan effort for San Antonio Botanical Gardens, a new landscape and campus for the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, an award winning residential design in New Hampshire, and a new vision and masterplan for Great Island in Darien, CT.

Meg earned dual Masters degrees in Landscape Architecture and Urban Planning from the Harvard Graduate School of Design and holds a Bachelor of Arts in Humanities and Literature from the New College of California. In addition to professional pursuits, Meg is an Adjunct Professor of Art History and Architectural Studies at Connecticut College and has addressed annual conferences at the American Society of Landscape Architects.

Born and raised in Galisteo, New Mexico, a village near the Rio Grande River surrounded by piñon-juniper forest, prairie, and meandering stream corridors, Meg brings an attention to land and water resource stewardship to her work. As a child she immersed herself in the bosque and cottonwoods along the Galisteo Creek, captivated by the light and dynamism of the landscape emerging from summer monsoons.