Chicago River Restoration Wins Award
Friends of the Chicago River is proud to announce that our work at Edgebrook Woods has won a Conservation and Native Landscaping Award from Chicago Wilderness.
Continue Reading »Friends of the Chicago River is proud to announce that our work at Edgebrook Woods has won a Conservation and Native Landscaping Award from Chicago Wilderness.
Continue Reading »The Chicago Tribune joined the ranks of supporters who want to see the massive riverbank restoration project at Horner Park go forward. The project, underway for over a decade, will greatly improve the river by regrading the steep bank and creating a native ecosystem where at present invasive plants prevail. There will also finally be access to the river at the park.
Continue Reading »Friends of the Chicago River opened the McCormick Bridgehouse & Chicago River Museum to great fanfare in 2006 with a ribbon cutting with Mayor Richard M. Daley, a grand gala, and a host of other celebratory activities. Since then over 60,000 people have visited this one-of-kind singular museum.
Continue Reading »Chicago is here because the river is here and it flourishes because early engineers figured out how to build a multitude of moveable bridges that allowed commerce to thrive and the city to grow.
Continue Reading »Today Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel announced a new water infrastructure plan that commits $50 million to green infrastructure that allows stormwater to infiltrate into the ground. His action will reduce the amount of pollution to the Chicago River by reducing the amount of stormwater that flows into our combined sewer system, and ultimately the Chicago River, picking up pollutants along its way.
Continue Reading »After years of advocacy by Friends of the Chicago River, the Environmental Law & Policy Center, Sierra Club of Illinois, Center for Neighborhood Technology and Openlands, the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago adopted a new Watershed Management Ordinance Thursday, October 3 that is essential for preventing floods, protecting wetlands and safeguarding our rivers and streams.
Continue Reading »The massive restoration plan for Horner Park is advancing as community members start to better understand the great impact the project will have on the riverbank and the river.
Continue Reading »On September 28, Friends' education manager, Mark Hauser, served as a key expert on the Chicago Tribune's second Chicago River Wildlife Cruise. This time they traveled down the South Branch to Bubbly Creek spotting a multitude of birds and other creatures including black crowned and great blue herons.
Continue Reading »Thirteen years after Friends first called for sewage treatment plant effluent disinfection in our report, Waterways for Our Future, yesterday the ceremonial shovels hit the ground.
Continue Reading »A massive riverbank restoration project at Horner Park was under attack by neighbors who were concerned that the plan removed too many trees. The US Army Corps of Engineers revised the high quality ecosystem restoration plan to address the objections.
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