State spends $73 million to protect Illinois’ only undeveloped Lake
Michigan shoreline
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[April 01, 2024]
By COLE LONGCOR
Capitol News Illinois
clongcor@capitolnewsillinois.com
A $73 million state-funded project in Lake County aims to stabilize the
last undeveloped Lake Michigan shoreline in Illinois and help protect
native endangered species.
Illinois Beach State Park in Zion on the state’s northern border
contains about 10 percent of Illinois’ Lake Michigan shoreline, with 6.5
miles. But the undeveloped shoreline can erode up to 100 feet per year,
according to the state’s Capital Development Board, which is partially
overseeing the stabilization project.
To mitigate the erosion, the Illinois Beach State Park Shoreline
Stabilization Project seeks to build 22 breakwater structures along 2.2
miles of shoreline. The breakwaters will protect the beach, maintaining
it for human and animal use while providing natural habitats for local
wildlife.
CDB spokesperson Lauren Grenlund said without intervention the beach
“would continue to slowly migrate and erode.” The project, she said,
“renourishes the existing sandy beach and shelters it from incoming wave
energy.”
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Its funding source is the state’s Rebuild Illinois capital program, a
$45 billion six-year infrastructure plan originally approved by the
General Assembly in 2019. Construction at Illinois Beach began in 2023,
and earlier this year the stabilization plan received recognition from
New York-based water infrastructure advocacy group The Waterfront
Alliance.
Illinois Beach State Park is the first freshwater project and first in
the Midwest to receive verification under the organization’s Waterfront
Edge Design Guidelines, or WEDG. The Waterfront Alliance launched the
WEDG program in 2015 and has since certified 13 other projects, mostly
in New York City and the surrounding area, though it opened up to other
parts of the country in 2019.
Grenlund said the state decided to submit the Illinois Beach State Park
project for WEDG certification – at a cost of $12,500 to cover the
application fee – as the project is the “highest standard of waterfront
design.”
“By achieving WEDG Verification, the Illinois Beach State Park project
stands out amongst other waterfront projects as a leader that goes above
and beyond standard environmental and regulatory requirements and
provides a broad community benefit,” Grenlund said.
The shoreline stabilization plan received a perfect score in the WEDG
program’s category of “innovation.”
“Where this one really stood out is that ecological features that they
built into the breakwater,” Joseph Sutkowi, Waterfront Alliance’s chief
waterfront design officer, said in an interview. “That's what kind of
took this one beyond just a typical breakwaters project, which is often
not that environmentally beneficial.”
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The new breakwater structures at Illinois Beach State Park will
create new habitats for native species including tern nests and
aquatic gardens. (Graphic courtesy of the Waterfront Alliance’s WEDG
Verified Project Case Study.)
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Sutkowi said the ecological features central to the project work to
create habitat spaces on the calm, shoreside of the breakwater
structures. The top of one of the structures will have 10 built-in nests
for migratory shorebirds like the Caspian tern and endangered common
tern. Stabilizing the shore and protecting habitats will help protect
animals who make their home on the beach, including the endangered
piping plover, another migratory bird species.
Under the lake’s surface, reclaimed concrete blocks from the site and
native plants will be used to foster aqua gardens and create habitat
spaces for species such as mudpuppies and yellow perch.
To protect the new habitats while balancing human use and access of the
site, a natural “soft” barrier will be constructed between the
breakwater structures and the beach using driftwood and sunken trees.
Views from the beach should not be impacted as the structures are mostly
submerged and are spaced out, according to IDNR and the Waterfront
Alliance.
Maintaining public access has been a factor throughout the process,
Sutkowi said. Grenlund said construction around the main swimming beach
and conference center only took place in off-season months. Construction
at the park’s northern and southern ends is “substantially complete,”
leaving the natural beach area in the middle of the park as the only
remaining location of further construction this summer, which is
expected to be completed in August.
Sutkowi said that beyond recognition, WEDG verification creates a level
of accountability as the project is built.
“It's a tool for the design team,” Sutkowi said. “But it's also a way
for advocates and others to help hold projects accountable for actually
creating great sites, because now there's a standard out there.”
To receive WEDG verification a project must meet 130 out of a possible
200 points. The Illinois Beach State Park Shoreline Stabilization
Project scored 146 points. It was designed by the infrastructure firm
Moffatt & Nichol. Other companies involved include SmithGroup, Edgewater
Resources, Michels Construction Incorporated, and Collins Engineering.
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