image description
The life of Roy Boutard, Berkshire Botanical Garden's venerable director from 1954-1984 will be celebrated May 1 with a free community event featuring a garden tour, traditional mai bowle reception and the opening of a seasonlong tree house exhibition. (Photo by Reinout van Wagtendonk, Berkshots)

Botanical Garden Pays Homage to Roy Boutard, Treehouses

By Nichole DupontiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story

STOCKBRIDGE, Mass. — It's finally spring in the Berkshires and many local gardeners are back in the dirt bringing up daisies.

Alongside the arrival of gorgeous (and long-awaited) displays of tulips, daffodils and magnolia trees, the Berkshire Botanical Garden is also ringing in the arrival of the flower season by honoring the past and welcoming the future.

The garden is hosting its first annual Roy Boutard Day on Sunday, May 1, from 9 to 5, in honor of one of its most beloved directors, who served the horticultural community there from 1954 to 1984. In addition to this good old-fashioned celebration, the garden will also present "Out On a Limb: Architects Take a Bow," a seasonlong exhibition of six innovative treehouses by architects and designers including Michael Trapp, Joseph Cho and Stefanie Lew of binocular design, Robyn Sandberg, Gray Davis and Will Meyer of  Meyer Davis Studio, Mark Smith and Tim Smith of 9 Partners Design and James Odegaard.

Robin Parow, communications director for the garden, said the day promises to be one of whimsy, beauty and, of course, sunshine.


Roy Boutard was director of the Berkshire Botanical Garden for 30 years. He died last year at age 94.

"We're expecting great weather and that's the most important thing," Parow said in a phone interview. "We have six unbelievable, amazing treehouses and we are encouraging families with children to come and explore them. They can go in the houses and see for themselves. It's really almost magical what the designers have done with these treehouses."



Parow likens the exhibition to a scene out of Swiss Family Robinson. Each treehouse contains its own unique character, having been inspired by a city-dwelling mockingbird, Colonial outbuildings, roofscapes, childhood memories and a Japanese lantern, to name a few, she said. These innovative structures set against the backdrop of blooms and sunshine encourage visitors to play, plant and get inspired for the growing season.

"People are pining for something green at this point," she said. "All of our spring blooming bulbs are out, the magnolia trees are magnificent, this place is quite a sight right now. Having the Roy Boutard Day in conjunction with the treehouse exhibition is just so wonderful. Here we have this old-fashioned traditional touch complete with a reception and punch delivered in an antique bowl and then a flip into the 21st century with a two-story treehouse fortress and mockingbird nest. It's really kind of perfect."

The garden's Herb Associates, a volunteer group, will provide the traditional Mai Bowle punch (which is a forever-secret recipe) as well as cookies and refreshments at a post-tour reception.

Cecile Roy Boutard died July 1, 2010, at the age of 94. A native of Sweden, he came to this country from Canada in the 1950s after graduating from England's Royal Horticultural Society Gardens.

Boutard wrote a regular column on gardening for The Berkshire Eagle and had a gardening show on WBEC. Under his direction, the garden expanded its grounds and educational offerings and won numerous gardening awards.

The tour, beginning at 1, will highlight Boutard's favorite display areas and gardens to which he contributed to during his three decades as director. Of course, no honorary celebration of spring is complete without a graduation and according to Parow, the BBG's got it covered.

"We are going to have a graduation ceremony for our horticultural program," she said. "These people have put years into studying here at the garden and now they are finally going to be certified horticulturists. It's quite an accomplishment all the way around."

Admission to the garden on Sunday is free and the grounds are open from 9 to 5. The Roy Boutard garden tour will begin at 1, followed by a Mai Bowle and reception.

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

PHS Community Challenges FY27 Budget Cuts

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The School Committee received an early look Wednesday at the proposed fiscal year 2027 facility budgets, and the Pittsfield High community argued that $653,000 would be too much of a burden for the school to bear. 

On Wednesday, during a meeting that adjourned past 10 p.m., school officials saw a more detailed overview of the spending proposal for Pittsfield's 14 schools and administration building.  

They accepted the presentation, recognizing that this is just the beginning of the budget process, as the decision on whether to close Morningside Community School still looms. The FY27 budget calendar plans the School Committee's vote in mid-April.

Under this plan, Pittsfield High School, with a proposed FY27 budget of around $8.1 million, would see a reduction of seven teachers (plus one teacher of deportment) and an assistant principal of teaching and learning, and a guidance counselor repurposed across the district.  

The administration said that after "right-sizing" the classrooms, there were initially 14 teacher reductions proposed for PHS. 

"While I truly appreciate the intentionality that has gone into developing the equity-based budget model, I am incredibly concerned that the things that make our PHS community strong are the very things now at risk," PHS teacher Kristen Negrini said. "Because when our school is facing a reduction of $653,000, 16 percent of total reductions, that impact is not just a number on a spreadsheet. It is the experience of our students." 

She said cuts to the high school budget is more than half of the districtwide $1.1 million in proposed instructional cuts. 

Student representative Elizabeth Klepetar said the "Home Under the Dome" is a family and community.  There is reportedly anxiety in the student body about losing their favorite teacher or activities, and Klepetar believes the cuts would be "catastrophic," from what she has seen. 

"Keep us in mind. Use student and faculty voice. Come to PHS and see what our everyday life looks like. If you spend time at PHS, you would see our teamwork and adaptability to our already vulnerable school," she said. 

View Full Story

More Stockbridge Stories