She was a founding member of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects,[1] and had a long and distinguished career in Western Australia before her retirement in 1981.
After marrying dentist Ivan Barnes Verschuer in 1951, she enrolled in a horticultural course at Perth Technical College, balancing caring for their three young children.
These included standard-gauge railway stations, the Salvation Army village in Hollywood, Western Australia, and the design of major mining towns and their surrounds.
[5][6][7] Following the incorporation of the AILA and her admission as a founding member, Brodie-Hall opened a private practice in Kalamunda, Western Australia.
[5] In 1970, Brodie-Hall was engaged by the University of Western Australia (UWA), initially to report on the changes to pedestrian and vehicle movement caused by the recently completed underpass from the north of the campus.