The annual fundraising Run/Walk organized by the Friends of the Hank Aaron State Trail was held on Saturday. The weather was great, attendance and spirits were high. I played my habitual role as photographer (which gets me out of running!) and I got a few shots to share.
The course began at Miller Park and went down Canal Street as far as 32nd St. This is the view from the 35th St. viaduct of Canal St. early in the pack.
The course looped back through Three Bridges Park.
The Milwaukee Bucks' drumming corps was on hand at the Valley Passage Bridge to charge up the crowd for the final leg.
I managed to catch quite a few runners and walkers as they crossed the Valley Passage Bridge, including Mayor Barrett (left).
Pam, one of the volunteers added cheer to those crossing the bridge with her mascot, "Honk Aaron" the goose.
To see many more photos go to my flickr album.
Full disclosure: I am a board member of Friends of the Hank Aaron State Trail. And happy to do it!
Showing posts with label three bridges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label three bridges. Show all posts
Monday, August 10, 2015
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
The Fund for Lake Michigan: supporting environmental restoration and innovation
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Elkin grew up in Chicago and identifies with Milwaukee and particularly the Menomonee Valley. Her father, an urban planner, worked on redevelopment of Chicago’s inner city neighborhoods. “I like Milwaukee’s mix of cultures, having industrial and residential neighborhoods near each other and seeing that what’s happening here really makes a difference in people’s lives. We’ve got it all here in the Valley.”
Two short photo essays of Fund for Lake Michigan projects:
Three Bridges Park
It didn’t take much persuasion. When Vicki Elkin suggested
that we go to Three Bridges Park for our photo session I jumped at it eagerly.
The park is one of several projects in the Menomonee Valley that have been made
possible in part by grants from the Fund for Lake Michigan, which Elkin
administers. As regular followers of this blog know, it is also one my favorite
places in the Valley.
We stroll between the contoured slopes of park hills that
rise from a formerly flat rail yard. Fresh green grasses and newly planted
seedlings emerge from burlap staked down to prevent erosion during this fragile
stage in the process of vegetating the park. A row of boxcars sits idle on one
of the remaining tracks adjacent to the park. The human hand in creating what
eventually will become natural-seeming habitat is everywhere apparent. It’s an
example of what I like to think of as “intelligent design” and an appropriate setting
to talk about Elkin’s role as Executive Director of the Fund for Lake Michigan
as well as the variety of environmental, scientific and technological projects
it has enabled. (A photo essay of 3 Bridges Park development follows.)
The Fund’s mission is to provide financial support for
efforts to improve the health of our Great Lake, which includes both the
shoreline and tributary watersheds. The Fund focuses primarily on projects in
Southeastern Wisconsin and the Menomonee Valley has particular appeal. “So much
is happening in the Valley that generates interest in projects here,” Elkin
tells me. “There’s a lot of buzz and we have great partners like the Urban
Ecology Center, the Water Council, MMSD and the Menomonee Valley Partners.”
Moreover, she says, “the Valley projects are a microcosm of
the types of projects we like to fund where you’re making improvements to water
quality and supporting demonstration projects, but also having an economic
impact. The fact that we’ve been able to support both habitat restoration and
innovative stormwater projects is perfect for us.”
In addition to Three Bridges Park the Fund has contributed
to several other Valley projects and plans for more in the future. Elkin
describes some of them for me.
The green roof at the Global Water Center “isn’t just any
ordinary green roof,” she assures me, “it’s a research lab monitored by the UWM
School of Freshwater Sciences to test what works best under what conditions.”
Two industrial-sized rain barrels have been installed under
the 35th Street viaduct that will capture and
filter 68,000 gallons of rainwater a year, reducing the amount of polluted
runoff flowing into the Menomonee River.
At the Reed Street Yards a number of innovative stormwater
initiatives are “pushing the envelope of systems for capturing rain and
filtering stormwater.” One of the goals of the Reed Street Yards development,
as in other parts of the Valley, is to capture all stormwater on site. (A photo essay of the Reed Street Yards development follows.)
Upstream on the Menomonee River Milwaukee Riverkeeper and
MMSD are working to remove impediments to fish, such as concrete weirs and low
dams. This will not only improve the river for fish habitat but also for the
human visitors that already have made the Valley a popular destination for
fishing.
Finally, the project that has me as excited as it does Elkin
is the proposed Burnham Canal restoration. This disused canal is one of few
remaining that once provided barges and other watercraft access to businesses
throughout the Valley. Currently “it’s an eyesore and a liability,” as Elkin
puts it. The project is intended to restore the concrete-lined, polluted canal
to sustainable wetland wildlife habitat. “I think it has the potential to be
transformative,” says Elkin, “and could be an example for other parts of the
Great Lakes of how to do restoration in a highly urbanized, industrial area.”
The Burnham Canal project also exemplifies visionary
leadership as well as the momentum of revitalization in the Menomonee Valley.
“It’s a Superfund site now,” Elkin tells me. “The canal could just be capped
and otherwise left as is, but there’s so much happening throughout the Valley
that it seems right for this to be the next area for revitalization. I really commend MMSD for putting forward a
bold vision for restoration of the site.” Building upon the success of Three
Bridges Park, “we can bring nature to the east end of the Valley, turn
liability into an asset.”
I ask about the Global Water Center, which is where the
Fund’s office is located at the downtown edge of the Menomonee Valley. “I love
it!” is her enthusiastic reply. “Watching the Water Council and water cluster
develop first hand is inspiring. There’s a lot of interaction and positive
energy, creativity and people excited to work together. It’s refreshing for me
to work in such a strong community.” She finds it exciting to work with the
people who “are at the cutting edge of the types of projects and innovative
water quality technologies we’re funding.”
As we wrap up our session at Three Bridges Park Elkin points
across the Menomonee River. There, in contrast with the newly refurbished riverfront
of the park, the north bank stands in wild abandon. Thickets of buckthorn and
other invasive species create a dense snarl. Clearing the bank of invasives and
extending the park trail along the north bank is a planned future project, she
says, and the Fund for Lake Michigan is ready to make a contribution.
Elkin grew up in Chicago and identifies with Milwaukee and particularly the Menomonee Valley. Her father, an urban planner, worked on redevelopment of Chicago’s inner city neighborhoods. “I like Milwaukee’s mix of cultures, having industrial and residential neighborhoods near each other and seeing that what’s happening here really makes a difference in people’s lives. We’ve got it all here in the Valley.”
Two short photo essays of Fund for Lake Michigan projects:
Three Bridges Park
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| 2012 |
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| 2014 |
Reed Street Yards
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| View from Sixth Street 2006 |
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| March 2014 |
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| March |
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| May |
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| June |
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| July |
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| August |
For more information go to the Fund for Lake Michigan website.
This post is one in a series that
relates to my Menomonee Valley Artist in Residency. For more information about
the residency and links to previous posts and photographs, go to MV AiR.
Monday, May 5, 2014
Menomonee Valley Artist Residency: Taking a chance on 3 Bridges Park
As familiar as I am with Three Bridges Park I can still be
surprised. This time it was neither something recently added to the unfinished landscape
nor a flower newly sprouted, our recalcitrant spring being slow to unfold. No,
I was surprised and delighted by a new perspective, a way of seeing what has
been there all along.
The day was overcast but mild for a change. An unusual
number of people were enjoying the park. An intermittent parade of individuals,
couples and families cycled or strolled along the trail. Walking west from
Mitchell Park the land rolled on ahead towards the 35th St. Viaduct;
the hills still brown and bare, only a hint of green softening their edges.
I imagined how beautiful it will be when the grasses and
trees mature.
Just across the fenced park boundary a string of rail cars
sat idle on the tracks. I briefly registered a frieze of colorful graffiti,
then scanned the debris-strewn slope beyond. The tangle of twisted trees and
brush was just beginning to bud. In summer it was a lush screen of vibrant greenery.
Now the feral shrubbery hid none of the degradation exacted upon it by years of
abuse and neglect. I turned away.
Please go to Urban Wilderness for the rest of this story and additional photos.
This post is one in a series that relates to my Menomonee Valley Artist in Residency. For more information about the residency and links to previous posts and photographs, go to MV AiR.
Please go to Urban Wilderness for the rest of this story and additional photos.
This post is one in a series that relates to my Menomonee Valley Artist in Residency. For more information about the residency and links to previous posts and photographs, go to MV AiR.
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Monday, February 17, 2014
Cross-country in the Menomonee Valley
The idea of skiing in the park hit me like sunshine breaking
through an overcast, wintry sky. You see it wasn’t my idea.
Skiing wasn’t on my mind when I walked into the Menomonee
Valley Branch of the Urban Ecology Center. In fact I hadn’t thought about
skiing in years. My intention had been to revisit Three Bridges Park—on foot,
with my camera. The stop at the UEC was to see if there might be kids heading
out to the park to sled on its hills. It had snowed earlier in the day and I
was hoping to shoot some action.
As I enter, Omar, the UEC’s Visitors Services Assistant, greets
me in the reception area. No, he says, the last group for the day had just
left. When I tell him I am heading out to the park he asks, “Would you like to take
skis?”
The rest of this story and additional photos are posted on my other blog: Urban Wilderness.
This
post is one in a series that relates to my Menomonee Valley Artist in
Residency. For more information about the residency and links to
previous posts and photographs, go to MV AiR.
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
At midwinter: The rebirth of the Menomonee Valley
I went for a nice long walk in 3
Bridges Park on Sunday afternoon, Groundhog Day. There was no sign of a
groundhog, but also no doubt about seeing shadows. The sun was bright and the
temperature surprisingly comfortable. It felt like a respite from our winter of
alternating polar vortices and snowstorms. I had expected to find other people
out enjoying the pleasant conditions but my ramble up and down the length of
the park was surprisingly solitary.
Judging from the numerous tracks,
Saturday had seen heavy use of the park, after yet another snowfall. Ski tracks
along the sloping terrain, sled runs down the steeper hills, foot traffic along
the Hank Aaron State Trail. Today, though, the park was empty—and beautiful,
with a minimalist kind of simplicity. It appeared pristine, as if a freshly
laundered sheet had been stretched over the rolling hills. How symbolic, I
thought, of its newness and potential.
The rest of this story and additional photos are posted on my other blog: Urban Wilderness.
The rest of this story and additional photos are posted on my other blog: Urban Wilderness.
This
post is one in a series that relates to my Menomonee Valley Artist in
Residency. For more information about the residency and links to
previous posts and photographs, go to MV AiR.
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