Shawnee Lookout Stream Restoration

Shawnee Lookout Stream Restoration

Improvement project

Projects at Great Parks

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Project Locations

location Shawnee Lookout

Project Dates

location START DATE: Spring 2025
location END DATE: 2026

Before it was a park or golf course, Shawnee Lookout was an area continuously inhabited for 10,000 years by several groups of indigenous people. This archeological district is undergoing a stream restoration where the golf course construction had previously buried streams and added culverts. 

Project Scope & Impact

  • Shawnee Lookout Cart Path

Tentative Project Timeline

DATE

  • Spring 2025
  • 2026

ACTIVITY

  • Construction begins
  • Construction Completed

Project Purpose

The landscape is known for its hills, valleys and incredible cultural history. On the former golf course, which closed in 2019, and in surrounding areas of the park, over 9,000 feet of streams were buried and moved into underground culverts. Great Parks and The Nature Conservancy will restore those streams to the surface in a process known as “daylighting.” Restoration will begin this year and includes the removal of culverts and asphalt from the old golf course, establishing riffles and pools along the stream and replacing invasive plants with a riparian buffer of native plants. Construction teams will plant 24,000 native trees and shrubs at the park, enhancing habitat for birds and other wildlife, providing shade for the stream and associated aquatic and riparian habitats, and improving water retention of the site. As part of the restoration project, the former cart path will be removed. A new 2-mile natural surface trail will replace it, following a more accessible grade.

Project Benefits

Restoration includes: daylighting of headwater streams, removal of culverts and asphalt, removal of invasive plants, reconnecting the stream to the floodplain and planting the riparian buffer with native plants and seeds. Once stream restoration is complete, Great Parks will develop a new 2-mile natural surface trail, following a more accessible grade.