Creekside Environmental Center Grand Opening planned for September
13
Open House event to include ribbon cut
and Center tours
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[September 09, 2014]
LINCOLN - A Grand Opening and Open
House for Creekside, Lincoln College’s Outdoor Center for
Environmental Education, will be held Saturday, September 13, from 9
a.m. to 2 p.m. The official ribbon cutting ceremony will be at 10
a.m. followed by tours, presentations about the Center’s various
features, and demonstrations. Light refreshments will be served.
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Creekside is an innovative 4-acre educational site
recognized by the scientific community for its biological diversity
and geological and archeological significance. The Center features a
lecture pavilion, insectarium, greenhouse, restored tall grass
prairie, native gardens, demonstration pond, solar and wind energy
developments, storm water management and rain garden, nature trails
and access to Sugar Creek near the location that Illinois’ largest
wooly mammoth fossil was discovered in 2005.
Dr. Dennis Campbell, Lincoln College professor of life and earth
sciences, has been utilizing the resources at Creekside in his
course curriculum for several years, but hopes the Center will also
become a community resource for environmental education and
recreation.
“Creekside will meet the needs of the educational and scientific
communities of Central Illinois, and serve as a living, breathing
laboratory where students and teachers can bring real-world issues
into focus, including global climate change, energy conservation,
soil and water protection, native plant and wildlife
rehabilitations. As well, Creekside is a convenient resource for
low-impact outdoor recreation for the area’s citizens,” said
Campbell.
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Creekside is located along Sugar Creek, about five miles
north of Lincoln. Directions: From I-55, take Exit 133 toward
Lincoln. Turn left onto North Lincoln Parkway and travel 3
miles. Turn right on 1250th Ave (Nicholson Rd) and travel 3.1
miles (passing over I-55, past the Epperson subdivision, and
over Kickapoo Creek). Turn left on 2000th St (the second left
after Kickapoo Creek) and travel about half a mile. Turn right
onto the gravel road marked Small-Edwards Trace that leads to
Creekside.
[Text received; TRACY BERGIN, LINCOLN
COLLEGE]
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