Mahan Rykiel Adds Business Development Director, Landscape Architects

We Recommend...
Newstogram
Contribute to Citybizlist, Share Your News

Baltimore-based landscape architecture, urban design and planning firm Mahan Rykiel Associates, Inc. has added four employees to its staff.

Carrie Ann Miller has joined the Mahan Rykiel team as Business Development Director. She has more than ten years of marketing experience in the A/E/C industry, most recently with AmDyne Corporation and previously as Business Development Manager for KCI Technologies. With Mahan Rykiel, she will oversee the development and execution of the firm's strategic marketing plan and client relationship development for each of the firm's target markets.

Also joining Mahan Rykiel are Katie Vocke, Blake Anderson and Justin Wilson. They join the firm as Staff Landscape Architects.

Katie Vocke is a 2011 graduate of the University of Maryland with a Bachelor's degree in Landscape Architecture. She was on the Dean's list every semester and was Vice President of the University of Maryland student chapter of ASLA. In 2010, she studied landscape architecture and music in Italy. She also was the recipient of the Maryland Nursery and Landscape Association Horticulture Scholarship.

Blake Anderson received Bachelor of Science degrees in both Landscape Architecture and Communication Science and Rhetorical Studies from the University of Wisconsin at Madison. He spent a summer studying at Peking University in Beijing studying how the physical environment affects human behavior giving special attention to the application of Feng Shui.

Prior to joining Mahan Rykiel, Justin Wilson received his Bachelor's degree in Landscape Management from Brigham Young University and his Master's degree in Landscape Architecture from Utah State University where he was the 2011 Olmsted Scholar. For more than a year, he volunteered in Russia and Belarus, teaching health education and maintaining and repairing orphanages and schools. His interests include therapeutic landscapes and recreation and park design.


blog comments powered by Disqus