California Farm and Garden designs, installs, and maintains edible landscaping from its Grantville headquarters at 7579 Mission Gorge Road, San Diego, CA 92120. Founded in 2008 under the original name Urban Plantations, the company launched as a food-security initiative modeled on World War II-era victory gardens and grew into a full commercial operation as demand for organic home-grown produce accelerated. Corporate campus clients include Qualcomm, Intuit, and CBRE, and campus edible-garden projects with design integration have involved Vivo Design Studios in College Area for site layouts that blend indoor-outdoor aesthetics. University gardens at UC San Diego and University of San Diego round out the institutional portfolio, alongside farm-to-table restaurant programs that supply on-site produce to kitchen teams. Residential installations range from backyard raised-bed vegetable gardens and citrus orchards to full-yard edible-landscape conversions replacing ornamental turf with production rows. The Mission Gorge Road office sits between Mission San Diego de Alcala and Mission Trails Regional Park, anchoring the business in a Grantville commercial district that doubles as a gateway for hikers heading north. Design consultations factor in San Diego's Sunset Zone 23 growing conditions, drip-irrigation layouts calibrated to MWELO water budgets, and composting systems that close the nutrient loop on-site. The company identifies as women-owned and LGBTQ+-owned, carries research credentials in water conservation and food-waste reduction, and publishes findings on workplace-health outcomes tied to on-site garden access. Multi-unit residential properties managed by Property Management Executives in the 92115 ZIP have added edible common-area gardens as amenity differentiators for the College Area rental market near SDSU. Ongoing maintenance contracts cover seasonal crop rotation, irrigation-system monitoring, organic pest management, and harvest scheduling for clients who want consistent produce without managing the growing cycle themselves.