How will children’s garden grow?
$5.6M renovation will make Garfield Park Conservatory’s beloved feature more accessible and add new learning spaces
The beloved children’s garden at the Garfield Park Conservatory will soon undergo major renovations, more than 20 years after it first opened.
“At the time it was built, it was quite innovative,” said Jennifer Van Valkenburg, president and CEO for the Garfield Park Conservatory Alliance, which is helping lead the project in partnership with the Chicago Park District. “It was the largest indoor natural playscape in the United States. The idea came a few years back that it’s definitely time for a face-lift.”
The 6,000-square-foot indoor garden is expected to cost $5.6 million to redo. Nearly $4 million has been raised for the project. Van Valkenburg said the money has come from tax increment financing, public donations and a $1 million grant from the Elizabeth Morse Genius Charitable Trust.
The project will focus on a commitment to be “the most inclusive nature education center in the United States,” said Van Valkenburg.
With things like improved ADA accessibility and new sensory spaces, the renovations will help create an accessible and inclusive space for all.
One of the biggest costs is a spiral ramp from the ground to the top of the roof of the Conservatory. This, Van Valkenburg said, will ensure an equitable experience for all, regardless of mobility limitations.
“Accessibility isn’t just an afterthought,” said Cathy Breitenbach, director of the Park District’s Department of Cultural and Natural Resources. “Kids with disabilities can really engage with the garden fully, and that’s exciting.”
Visitors can also expect to see things like an art and nature gallery, a 20-foot climbing structure, a toddler-specific gallery and a texture trail. The biggest crowd-pleaser, the Caterpillar Slide, will remain, although it will be updated.
Van Valkenburg said renovations will help contextualize global climate change for children.
“For people to be connected to nature, understand ecosystems, understand that these plants talk to each other and to us and that we rely on them,” she said. “We are extremely excited and privileged to have the opportunity to connect people to that understanding of nature in a way that’s not scary and that is embracing our relationship with plants and nature.”
Breitenbach said the project is unique to the park system because of its indoor learning status.
“To have this kind of experience where you have the physical components of a playground and all the climbing and active play, but also all the nature exploration and educational opportunities in an indoor setting, you could experience it year-round,” she said.
While the children’s garden is closed as part of pandemic safety precautions, it’s normally a popular site. In pre-COVID times, the garden welcomed close to 20,000 schoolchildren yearly on field trips. With the garden’s own 20 hours of weekly hands-on learning programs, said Van Valkenburg, the number increased to 50,000. In 2019, before it closed for safety precautions, a total of 260,000 people visited.
“The Children’s Garden has seen so much love,” said Van Valkenburg. “We have stories of generations of people that have been there as kids and now bring their own kids 20 years later.”
The project, which is still raising money at gpca.givecloud.co/emg, is expected to break ground in the spring and reopen in fall 2023.