Community Corner

Forest Preserve Receives Award For Lockport Prairie Restoration

The restoration of more than 600 acres at Lockport Prairie and Prairie Bluff preserves took six years of coordinated work, the preserve said

WILL COUNTY, IL — The Forest Preserve District of Will County has received a Silver Ribbon Award from Friends of the Chicago River for the Lockport Prairie and Prairie Bluff Ecosystem Restoration Project, the forest preserve shared in a news release.

The award was presented during the 2026 Chicago-Calumet River Summit, themed “In Defense of Biodiversity,” held Jan. 30 at Skidmore, Owings & Merrill in downtown Chicago.

The annual summit brings together conservation leaders, planners, designers and advocates to highlight projects that protect and restore the Chicago-Calumet River system and surrounding watersheds through the Chicago River Blue Awards, the preserve said.

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“It’s wonderful to receive this award, which recognizes the habitat restoration work done at Lockport Prairie Nature Preserve in partnership with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,” said Juli Mason, the Forest Preserve District’s director of conservation. “It recognizes the extraordinary ecological value of Lockport Prairie Nature Preserve and the hard work of countless crews to restore and enhance it.”

Lockport Prairie protects globally rare dolomite prairie and provides critical habitat for federally endangered species like leafy prairie clover, lakeside daisy and the Hine’s emerald dragonfly, she added.

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“Restoring and maintaining this landscape ensures these rare species, and the complex groundwater-fed wetlands they depend on, will continue to thrive,” Mason said in a release.

According to the forest preserve, the restoration of more than 600 acres at Lockport Prairie and Prairie Bluff preserves took six years of coordinated work by the Forest Preserve District, the Army Corps and Resource Environmental Solutions LLC.

“Prior to investment in this site, the floristic quality of the prairie had been in steady decline, putting at risk the regionally important Hine’s emerald dragonfly habitat,” Friends of the Chicago River wrote in its award announcement. “The project’s incredible site improvements include expansive removal of invasive species, restoring natural underground flow processes, and improving habitats along the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal corridor.”

Friends of the Chicago River has worked since 1979 to protect and restore the Chicago-Calumet River system.

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