Philippe Chalin

 

 

3 ACRES ON THE LAKE
Dusable Park Proposal Project

Although the parcel of land in question is destined for use as real estate, today the area is virtually unconstructible. The traces of radioactive pollution found in the ground and the mounds of debris almost 6 m high make the environment seem hostile. Yet its heritage value as the landing site for Jean Baptiste DUSABLE, founding father of the City of Chicago, gives added appeal to its rehabilitation.

The initial intention of the project is to consolidate the isolated, untouchable nature of the land by creating a large area of luxurious vegetation, similar to that which covered the banks of the lake before any urban development took place.

The dominant species is the reed (Phragmites Australis). This aquatic plant grows to a height of 2 m 50 and its stem is persistent in winter. It is not frequently used in landscaping because of its invasive nature, but offers a number of advantages in both aesthetic and ecological terms. At the end of the fall, most of the Reed Bed (1) will be cut down to enable its regeneration the following spring and to prevent the plants from proliferating. Uncut plots some thirty square metres in surface area, to be used as hibernation areas for birds, will provide a moving spectacle with the changing of the seasons.

Another advantage is that the reeds will also act on the quality of the water in the lake by fixing the heavy metals that are present in fairly large quantities in the water of the lake, and will provide refuge for certain species during winter, enabling them to reproduce in the spring.

The Jean Baptiste Dusable Memorial (2) is located in the centre of the park, in the continuation of the pathway across the island.

A concrete quay (3), 5 m wide, is located on the edges of the parcel. It is flanked on either side by the water of the lake. On one side Lake Michigan, on the other, a shallow canal (4) 6 m wide. It is designed on the one hand to underscore the inaccessible nature of the Reed Bed, and on the other to enable certain species of fish to reproduce. It is linked to the lake by culverts (5).
From the quay, access to the Reed Bed is limited by crossover points (6) leading to a north-south pathway across the park (7) in the middle of the walls of reeds.

Two small irrigation canals (8) supply the Reed Bed with water from the lake. To the west, a circular watering point (9) is reserved for growing aquatic species of plants, such as Bulrushes, Dwarf Lake Irises, or Branched Bur-Reed.

To the south-west, an observation platform (10) 2m 50 high overlooking the Reed Bed will provide a panoramic view of the site before an eventual visit...

Chalin, Philippe
Le Havre, France
philippe.chalin@wanadoo.fr

 

 

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