Community Corner

City of Wheaton to Provide Water Service to St. James Farm to Help Facilitate Improvements

The board approved an intergovernmental agreement with Wheaton to extend the city's municipal water line to St. James Farm,

Forest Preserve District of DuPage County commissioners are taking steps to bring municipal water service to St. James Farm Forest Preserve in Warrenville to accommodate improvements to the site.

The board approved an intergovernmental agreement with Wheaton to extend the city’s municipal water line to St. James Farm, located on Winfield Road between Butterfield and Mack roads. The forest preserve district will cover the $2.9 million cost to design, permit and construct the project, and Wheaton will maintain the water line in the public right-of-way outside of District property upon completion, according to a news release.

The water main will provide drinking water for people and animals and a reliable source of water for fire-suppression systems. Both will allow the District to open various buildings at St. James Farm for public use and expand its programming at the indoor riding arena, barns and stables, according to the press release.

Find out what's happening in Wheatonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“After reviewing various alternatives, it was determined that obtaining water from Wheaton was the most efficient and economical option,” said Forest Preserve District Commissioner Al Murphy, District 6.
The proposed water-line route would follow Hoy Avenue from Wiesbrook and Butterfield roads near Wheaton Warrenville South High School to St. James Farm.

The District is also moving forward with improvements to the indoor riding arena so it can use the building for equestrian and other recreational activities. Tentative plans call for upgrading the HVAC, electrical and lighting systems; adding restrooms, bleachers, fire alarms, sprinklers, emergency lights and signs; and modifying doors, windows and skylights.

Find out what's happening in Wheatonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“We hope these improvements will allow us to provide additional recreational opportunities to DuPage County residents,” said Forest Preserve District of DuPage County President Joe Cantore.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.