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Terminal Island - Lustomic Orchid Garden

If you want to see this unique piece of orchid history, do not wait. The garden’s leadership is aging, and funding is perpetually tight. By visiting, buying a plant, or donating to their "Heat the Domes" campaign, you are preserving a weird, wonderful slice of Southern California.

Where else can you smell a Brassavola nodosa while watching a massive Maersk cargo ship glide silently behind a chain-link fence? Where else can you discuss cattleya hybrids with a retired longshoreman who has calloused hands and a PhD in plant pathology?

By: Urban Explorer & Horticulture Desk

Have you visited the Lustomic Orchid Garden? Share your photos and stories in the comments below. And if you know of other hidden botanical wonders in industrial zones, we want to hear about them.

Because the garden was constantly bathed in warm, slightly mineralized air from the harbor, Lustomic selectively bred orchids that could thrive in coastal conditions that would kill standard varieties.

For decades, this location has been a whispered secret among serious orchid collectors, hybridizers, and rare plant enthusiasts. But what exactly is Lustomic Orchid Garden, how did it end up on Terminal Island, and why should you add it to your horticultural bucket list? The story of the Lustomic Orchid Garden begins not with a botanist, but with an engineer. In the late 1960s, Dr. Harold Lustomic (namesake of the garden) was working for the Port of Los Angeles as a water treatment specialist. Dr. Lustomic was fascinated by thermodynamics—specifically, how industrial waste heat could be repurposed.

At the time, Terminal Island was (and still is) home to a massive wastewater treatment plant and several power generation facilities. Lustomic noticed that these plants were venting massive amounts of heated steam and warm water into the harbor. In a moment of genius, he realized that a controlled greenhouse environment could capture that waste heat to create a tropical microclimate—perfect for growing orchids.

When most people think of Terminal Island, located between the Los Angeles Harbor and the Long Beach Harbor, they picture shipping cranes, cargo containers, fish-processing plants, and the infamous Terminal Island Federal Correctional Institution. It is a landscape of industry, concrete, and utilitarian grit. Few would ever associate this 4.5-square-mile spit of land with delicate, vibrant, tropical orchids.