If you’ve lived in Salt Lake long enough, you’ve almost certainly driven past Millcreek Gardens without realizing the history sitting behind that fence on 900 East. It’s easy to miss—a cluster of green tucked between traffic and old neighborhoods—until one day you notice it, pull in, and step into what feels like a small oasis that shouldn’t exist in a state famous for scorching summers and brittle lawns.
I told LaRene Bautner and Heidi Orme (LaRene’s daughter and next-generation co-owner) that they had my dream job. Working outside all summer, surrounded by leaves, soil, and color? Sign me up. They laughed and told me to come by anytime. As it turns out, that spirit—open, relational, unpretentious—is exactly how Millcreek Gardens not only survived but thrived for 70 years in a city where most small nurseries disappeared decades ago.
The story begins in 1955, when a young couple moved their family into a sagging 1860s home on what would one day become prime Millcreek real estate. The house had gaps wide enough to see daylight through, and the attached greenhouse was so dilapidated it would qualify as a fixer-upper even by Utah pioneer standards. But they had land, a few plants on the way from a relative’s nursery in Oregon, and roughly $25 to their name. Utilities were promised to be paid “in the spring,” assuming they could make it that far.
Still, something about this scraggly property felt right. LaRene told me, “My parents didn’t have anything, but they had ambition. They had each other. And they had plants coming whether they were ready or not.”
Her father decided to launch a landscaping business before most people knew what professional landscaping was. He had an unusual sales technique: he’d drive around new subdivisions with a Polaroid camera, take photos of people’s houses, and in the time it took the picture to develop, he’d use colored markers to draw in a custom landscape. Then he’d knock on the door and say, “Let me show you your home.”
That approach, half showmanship and half foresight, worked. People hired him. And as more plant materials accumulated behind the little rundown house, neighbors began knocking and asking to buy trees and shrubs. “That really is how the garden center started,” LaRene said. “People asked, and my dad said yes.”
Saying yes has been a theme ever since.

In those early years, money was tight enough that building a warehouse was out of the question. So LaRene’s father bought an old army barracks in Midvale, chained it to a tractor, and dragged it slowly and probably illegally down the road to Millcreek. “He did it at two in the morning,” she said, shaking her head with equal parts disbelief and affection. “I don’t know how he got away with it.” He dragged another one later, cut openings in both, attached them, and used them as the nursery’s warehouse for the next 45 years.
It’s nearly impossible to imagine something like that happening today. But the story fits the place: resourceful, a little scrappy, and stubborn enough to make things work.
Many garden centers across Utah didn’t make it through the growth of big-box stores. But Millcreek Gardens didn’t try to beat big boxes at their own game. They tried to do what big boxes couldn’t.
“You can’t treat Utah like Oregon,” Heidi told me. “Most big-box plants are grown for national distribution. They don’t hold up here. They look good the day you buy them, and two weeks later they’re sad.” She shrugged. “We choose plants that will actually survive in this climate.”
Behind the scenes, the team spends hours sorting through plant availabilities, chasing down unusual varieties, and growing their own perennials from plugs. Customers often think the difference between big-box plants and Millcreek’s is cosmetic. It isn’t. It’s survival. “If four or five customers ask for something, we find it,” Heidi said. “That’s how our selection gets so big.”
But the most interesting insight came from LaRene. I asked her why Utah homeowners lose so many trees and perennials every year. Without hesitation, she said, “Ninety-eight percent of plant failures are hydration issues.”
It wasn’t the answer I expected.
Most people blame soil, sun exposure, or their own lack of gardening knowledge. But Utah’s soil dries out differently than what homeowners expect. It often looks wet on the surface while the root ball still shaped like the plastic pot it came in dries out silently. “People water the soil, but the water never hits the roots,” LaRene explained. “That’s why the plant dies. It’s not that people can’t garden. It’s that Utah is a desert.”
If that’s the diagnosis, then their treatment plan is simple: dig at the right depth, mix compost with native soil, create a shallow bowl around the plant to funnel water to the roots, and then water deeply. “We teach people because they don’t get taught anywhere else,” she said. “And it saves them a lot of frustration.”
What I came to realize is that Millcreek Gardens doesn’t just sell plants, they teach people how to build four-season yards, something most Utah homeowners don’t even know is possible. We think in terms of spring color and summer maintenance. They think in terms of leftover silhouettes in January light; shrubs with red or gold branches; perennials that keep their structure under snow; evergreen containers made of branches, cones, and berries.
“We train our staff to think about height, texture, foliage, patterns,” Heidi said. “You can build something beautiful in every season.”
When I told them about my yard being destroyed and I wanted it to look decent again, their team quickly helped me choose plants with structure, subtle color, and resilience things that matched a small Sugar House bungalow and wouldn’t die immediately. I didn’t know I was getting a crash course in four-season design. I just knew the yard stopped looking like an abandoned lot.
That’s what Millcreek Gardens does. They don’t simply sell you plants; they help you create a landscape with depth and longevity. They know Utah’s climate because they’ve been living and planting in it for 70 years.
And what really keeps the place running isn’t horticulture, it’s relationships.
“I always get something from visiting a customer’s yard,” LaRene told me. “Sometimes it’s friendship, sometimes advice, sometimes a reminder that we’re part of something bigger.” It’s the same feeling you get walking through the nursery: staff members greeting regulars by name, answering questions about irrigation systems, and sharing stories about the history of the property. One customer comes in looking for hydrangeas; another just wants to know why their tree is unhappy. Both leave with something useful.
Now, after decades of leading the business, LaRene is gradually passing the reins to Heidi. “There will be changes,” she told me. “But the core stays the same. We’re here to help the community.” Heidi nodded. “It’s a happy place,” she said. “We want to keep it that way.”
And after spending an afternoon with them, I believe they will.
*Photos by Rebecca Kay

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