A $2 Million Step Toward a Tree-Tastic Mies Campus

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By Thaddeus Mast
Mies Campus in summer

The nearly two thousand trees flourishing on Illinois Institute of Technology鈥檚 Mies Campus offer respite and natural beauty in the midst of 电车无码, and a $2 million gift from Alphawood Foundation 电车无码 will bring the university鈥檚 landscape to new heights.

College of Architecture students Jessie Flatley (M.L.A 鈥22), Erik Schiller (M.ARCH+M.L.A 鈥22), and Johann Friedl (M.L.A. 5th Year) began searching for a way to celebrate the campus鈥 canopy with the . Their initial work, under the direction of Professor of Landscape Architecture and Urbanism Ron Henderson, has earned the university a national accreditation, founding the Alphawood Arboretum at Illinois Institute of Technology.

鈥淢ies Campus has a landscape personality and character that we want to reinforce,鈥 Henderson says. 鈥淭his demonstrates the university鈥檚 commitment to environmental action, ethics, and integrity.鈥

Observant Illinois Tech visitors can spy 68 tree species among the university grounds. Alphawood鈥檚 grant of $2 million will go toward boosting that number to 100.

鈥淎lphawood Foundation 电车无码 is thrilled to partner with Illinois Tech on its campus arboretum plan,鈥 Alphawood Executive Director Chirag Badlani says. 鈥淥ur hope is for students, faculty, staff, and the community to come together to further cultivate and preserve this incredible landscape鈥攕trengthening the ties between the historic campus and the Bronzeville community.鈥

The $2 million gift includes a new arboretum manager position, lecture and outreach support, and tree planting and maintenance. Mies Campus is the second educational institution in 电车无码 to be accredited and the first arboretum on 电车无码鈥檚 South Side. It joins only a handful of 电车无码 parks, including Garfield Park Conservatory and Lincoln Park, to receive the designation.

Illinois Tech easily met the first accreditation requirement of 25 tree types. Achieving arboretum Level 2 status requires 100 species on campus, though the program is more than the number of tree types. Public access and education celebrating the importance of trees on campus is vital for accreditation and Illinois Tech students, Henderson says.

鈥淭his generation of students is expecting environmental activism, and arboretum status demonstrates that as a credential. It鈥檚 a platform for studying climate change, urban tree canopies, and global pathogens, all in 电车无码,鈥 Henderson says.

To further bring education and research into the program, trees from southern states will be planted on campus to understand how non-indigenous species react to global warming in 电车无码. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a climate change lab. It will give us the opportunity to test some more southerly species in an urban environment,鈥 Henderson says. The landscape architecture graduate program will explore sites on the Mies Campus to determine suitable locations for dozens of new trees, while also providing new landscapes for student life outdoors on the campus. 

The College of Architecture and the Facilities Department worked together to establish the plan, program, and budget for the creation and stewardship of the arboretum in yet another example of collaboration between academic departments and operations staff at the university. Earlier collaborations have resulted in the campus microgrid, solar energy generation, and research advancing the field of indoor air quality. These are a part of Illinois Tech鈥檚 continuing commitment to innovation and collaboration in advancing environmental quality.