When Cleveland Metroparks acquired a 155-acre former golf course, they recognized its potential to enhance local ecology and become a new gem in the regionβs βEmerald Necklace.β Metroparks envisioned the new βAcacia Reservation,β as a model urban ecological preserve that would provide wildlife habitat, filter and treat stormwater, and provide a unique opportunity for people to enjoy and appreciate the plants and wildlife that are native to northern Ohio.
After working with Metroparks to craft a master plan to guide this transformation, Biohabitats initiated a design-build project to begin advancing the ecological restoration goals. The project involves restoring Euclid Creek which flows through the site, along with an intermittent stream to Euclid Creek, and headwater streams and wetlands which traversed portions of the former golf course and had been underlain by drainage tile.
Decades of stormwater flows from the densely developed area adjacent to the site had caused the channels to become eroded, incised, and disconnected from their floodplains. Euclid Creek was serving as a stormwater expressway to Lake Erie. This restoration not only helped provide better stormwater retention and treatment, it also fostered the regeneration of riparian areas and a whole new layer of urban ecology.
TAGS
Owner: Cleveland Metroparks
Bioregion: Great Lakes
Ecoregion: Low Lime Drift Plain
Physiographic province: Appalachian Plateaus
Watershed: Euclid Creek-Frontal Lake Erie
Collaborators: Chagrin Valley Engineering, DLZ