|
Purpose
Of This Source Book
In
recent years, a new look in landscaping, commonly known as natural landscaping,
has been gaining enthusiastic acceptance across the country. Natural landscaping
is an aesthetically exciting, ever-changing tapestry of hardy, primarily
native plantings well adapted to the local climate and soil. It provides
a cost effective alternative to conventional turf grass lawns. 
Natural landscaping
minimizes the environmentally detrimental effects of pesticides and fertilizers,
as well as the noise pollution, and the emission of air-polluting substances
from lawn-maintenance equipment. It virtually eliminates the need to use
water for irrigation as is required for turf grass lawns. While not maintenance
free, natural landscaping requires less time and money for ongoing maintenance
than conventional landscapes.
Homeowners
and developers alike are beginning to appreciate the environmental, economic
and aesthetic benefits of natural landscaping.
Local officials
are in a position to advocate natural landscaping and bring its benefits
to their communities. Local governments demonstrate the benefits by using
native plant materials on government owned and managed lands. Government
officials can amend comprehensive plans and adopt ordinances to promote
the appreciation and use of natural landscapes. Citizen education about
the benefits of natural landscaping can provide a powerful incentive,
especially if government officials can point to pilot projects of their
own.
This Source Book
will:
- Explain the basic
principles and benefits of natural landscaping;
- Demonstrate the
feasibility of using natural landscaping successfully in the region;
- Provide information
regarding the ways that local officials as community leaders can encourage
the use of natural landscaping;
- Identify ways
to avoid pitfalls that could result in poorly implemented natural landscaping
or cause problems for local government;
- Describe tools
and techniques; and
- Provide direction
to other sources of information and expertise.
This guidebook was
prepared by the Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission (NIPC) for the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 5. The intended audience
is local officials, land owners, and citizens in the greater northeastern
Illinois region.
Because regional
geological histories and climate vary greatly and are basic to implementing
natural landscaping, natural landscaping in other regions must be tailored
to those unique conditions. Therefore, landscape planners and ecological
restoration practitioners in other regions, and even within this large
northeastern Illinois region, will need to research their own landscape
history. They will need to obtain local information in order to understand
their specific natural conditions and native vegetation. However, the
basic principles and benefits of natural landscaping, as described in
this Source Book, should apply anywhere.
What
is natural Landscaping ?
Landscaping is the
physical modification of outdoors to serve the needs of people by planting,
altering the contours of the ground, and building structures and amenities
such as pedestrian ways, paths and picnic areas.
Native landscaping,
Natural landscaping, and Beneficial landscaping Natural
landscaping is a relatively new term. Other terms in current use mean
much the same thing and are somewhat interchangeable. The terms are discussed
in the context of the midwestern United States
Native landscaping
refers to the use of plants -- for example, prairie, woodland and wetland
plants -- that flourished in northeastern Illinois prior to its occupation
by settlers from eastern North America and Europe.
Natural landscaping
implies the use of native plants but has slightly broader implications
because it also suggests landscaping to give the "look" of the landscape
that existed before the mid 1800. In addition, there may also be an attempt
to restore or reconstruct the landscape to look and function more as it
did before settlers, other than Native Americans lived here. Natural
landscaping applies to a wide array of landscaping techniques that help
retain natural landscape features, including wetlands, woodlands and natural
drainage features. For example, natural landscaping site design incorporates
natural drainage features such as swales and vegetated "filter strips"
in contrast to storm sewers and artificial drainage channels.
Prairie planting at Lucent Technologies
Naperville, Illinois
Beneficial landscaping
is another term in current use that embraces both native and natural landscaping.
The term beneficial landscaping also includes the use of shading and windbreaks,
which reduce heating and cooling needs for buildings. These
terms are relatively new and their definitions are somewhat fluid. Questions
of terminology should not obscure the basic intent or concepts. The term
"natural landscaping" will be used throughout this guide. In the Appendix
of this guide is a glossary of frequently used terms associated with natural
landscaping.
The
landscapes of Yesterday and Today
Northeastern
Illinois lies along the northeastern edge of the range of the Tall Grass
Prairie of the Midwest. The prevailing landscape before European settlement
was open prairie. In some areas the prairie was flat, in others rolling.
The prairies were regularly interspersed with poorly drained lowland and
dry, well-drained uplands. Rainfall flowed from the uplands into lowland
wet meadows and marshes.
|
|
Throughout
the region were small to large tracts of savannas consisting primarily
of scattered oak trees interspersed with characteristic grasses and forbs.
More heavily forested areas, some covering vast acreages and known to
the European settlers as "The Big Woods," grew on the eastern sides of
our north-south running rivers, where they were protected from fierce
prairie fires. In some places, impenetrable thickets covered sandy areas
and low dunes.
Native prairie,
woodland and wetland plants of the Chicago region have great beauty and
are well adapted to local conditions. Unfortunately, they have been displaced
to a large extent by non-native plants that were familiar to the people
who first farmed and developed our urban areas. Only in recent years have
the beauty and utility of our native plants and plant communities become
widely appreciated.
Our predominant landscaping material today, the green grass lawn, is borrowed
from the heavily grazed, short grass pastures and formal gardens of Europe,
particularly England. In that moist climate, the closely cropped grasses
evolved with the grazing sheep, goats and cows. Understandably, pioneers
from Europe, used to the short grasses, brought the grasses as well as
medicinal and food plants to make the unfamiliar feel familiar and homelike.
Unfortunately, the grasses they brought do not thrive as well-kept lawns
without a great deal of effort to simulate the conditions under which
they evolved in Europe.
Our area of
the country, with its harsher climate of extremes of heat and deep freezes,
drought and drenching rains, is an inhospitable atmosphere for short-cropped,
short-rooted grass. Therefore, the contemporary weed-free lawn, is maintained
at a high price, not only in terms of dollars but also degraded water
and air quality, water consumption, and the peace and quiet of our neighborhoods.
We need to
assess which parts of our landscapes could be replaced with native plants.
In returning to a more natural landscape, we will be returning those plants
which evolved under our conditions of climatic stress, which require less
maintenance and coddling and provide environmental, economic and aesthetic
benefits.
One immediate result of the switch from conventional to native or natural
landscaping is that our landscape can thrive under the diverse conditions
across the region:
- sandy soils associated
with Lake Michigan and its larger predecessors;
- rich lowland forest
soils in floodplains along streams and rivers;
- heavy clay soils
in low-lying wooded areas;
- wet conditions
associated with wetlands, wet prairies, and riparian corridors;
- dry rolling uplands
on rolling lands left by glaciers; and
- moderate conditions
originally covered by tall-grass prairies and groves of oaks and other
hardwoods.
Fortunately, there
is a selection of native plants that have a wide tolerance for varying
conditions and work well in many locations. Where special expertise and
resources are available, ambitious natural landscaping projects can attempt
to restore the original soil and water conditions.
How
can
natural landscaping be used?
Almost
everyone can use natural landscaping. There is no rigid set of rules that
dictates how much or what qualifies as natural landscaping or when it
is appropriate. The concept embraces a range of opportunities for property
owners, managers and public officials. Any effort that increases the amount
of area devoted to natural landscaping will be of some benefit. It will
largely be up to property owners, local officials, planners, engineers,
and landscape professionals, to determine where, what kind, and how much.
Some examples:
New developments
of all types can:
- preserve and enhance
existing natural areas such as prairie, wetland, floodplain and woodland
areas as an essential component of site planning;
- cluster homes
in order to reserve green areas designed with native plants as a substitute
for conventional subdivision design;
- reduce the amount
of impervious surfaces by substituting vegetation where appropriate;
- utilize natural
drainage approaches such as swales and vegetated filter strips instead
of storm sewers.
Existing institutional
and commercial complexes can:
- create prairie,
wetland, and woodland areas as part of government, corporate and institutional
campuses, and reduce the area devoted to turf grass;
- design and retrofit
stormwater detention basins as natural wetland/prairie systems to enhance
water quality and other environmental benefits.
Individuals and groups
of homeowners can:
- totally or partially
replace lawn areas and common areas with native plants and retrofit
areas for more natural stormwater detention.
Golf courses can:
- reduce the amount
of turf by including areas of rough devoted to native plants and natural
environments. The Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary Program for Golf Courses
encourages golf courses to include wildlife habitat enhancement, establishment
of Integrated Pest Management (IPM) programs, and protection of water
resources.
Local governmental
units can:
- incorporate natural
areas into non-active areas on most types of public property, as well
as use natural landscaping for stormwater management.
Native
plants can be used in various ways in the landscape
Native plants
as one part of the landscaping material:
Existing
or new building sites can use native trees, shrubs and grasses instead
of the "exotic" plants typically marketed by nurseries. Native grasses
and ground covers may partially replace turf areas. This approach is becoming
increasingly popular with homeowners. Natural landscaping on commercial
properties provides environmental benefits and a distinctive appearance
to the building site. Native vegetation used in "ornamental" ways in landscape
design can create unusual and attractive effects.
- Native plants
as the principal landscaping material
With
careful planning, native plants can constitute the primary landscaping
material in new development sites and sites that are being re-landscaped.
This approach may be particularly appropriate for office campuses, public
facilities and parks, institutions, and clustered residential development.
It can realize major environmental improvements and cost savings.
- Using more
vegetation and less concrete and asphalt
The
excessive use of concrete, asphalt and other impervious materials in
our landscapes causes several environmental problems. It accelerates
stormwater runoff and creates flooding and erosion conditions for communities
along streams. It results in higher temperatures in urban environments,
making the out-of-doors less pleasant and increasing the need for air
conditioning. Increasing the use of vegetation -- especially native
vegetation -- in our landscaping can reduce damage from stormwater runoff,
reduce temperatures, reduce energy costs, improve water quality and
increase wildlife habitat.
Strategies for increasing
the amount of permeable surfaces include: reducing street widths in residential
developments, reducing setbacks between buildings and streets, designing
smaller parking lots which include island vegetation, and clustering development
on part of a site. Unused paved areas can be "unpaved" and natural landscaping
installed.
There are several special situations where the natural landscaping approach
should be considered:
- To preserve
existing native vegetation
Preserving
existing natural vegetation is a fundamental purpose of natural landscaping.
While very little area within the region has been left in its native
state by humans, there are rare and valuable natural area remnants (wetlands,
prairies, and woodlands) which should be protected and properly managed.
With removal of exotic species, native plants will often re-establish
themselves rather quickly.
- To restore
ecological systems
Another primary use of natural landscaping involves restoring
entire ecosystems with a full complement of native species. These projects
include restoration of previously altered hydrology, such as stream
and wetland restoration and removal of drain tiles. Intensive design,
monitoring and maintenance programs with long-term professional oversight
are critical to the success of the restored landscape. On publicly
owned lands, volunteers can help accomplish large scale restorations.
Volunteer workers and expert volunteer stewards are already providing
experienced stewardship in all Chicago area counties.
- To create
greenways
Linear
open spaces called "greenways" provide exceptional opportunities for
utilizing natural landscaping to protect and restore the region's ecological
identity. Many of the region's forest preserves are in greenway corridors
and are being managed to maintain their natural character. The Northeastern
Illinois Regional Greenways Plan adopted by the Northeastern Illinois
Planning Commission (NIPC) in 1992 reflects these regional greenway
opportunities. Local jurisdictions can plan and implement local
greenways that connect with the regional greenway network. Greenways
are appropriate on both public and private property. Local and regional
greenways are excellent and appropriate locations for natural landscaping.
Many greenways contain rivers, streams, or other waterways. In these
locations native vegetation in buffer strips adjacent to the stream
provides wildlife habitat, bank stabilization, and water quality benefits.
These buffer strips protect natural resources from human impacts and
filter our pollutants that could flow into streams.
- To stabilize
streambanks and shorelines
Native
willows, grasses and other plants can be used to stabilize eroding streambanks
and shorelines. The techniques that employ native plant materials are
collectively called bioengineering. They are effective, less costly,
and provide better wildlife habitat than traditional engineering approaches.
- To manage
flood and stormwater
Flooding affects many communities in Northeastern Illinois. Floodplains
are regulated so they will be retained in non-intensive, open space
uses in order to reduce hazards from flooding. Planting native vegetation
in floodplains helps absorb and slow flood waters. Stormwater
detention basins designed to replicate the natural water purification
functions of wetlands also improve water quality and wildlife habitat
as well as creating aesthetically pleasing landscapes. Careful design
and planting of these basins allows them to blend more naturally into
the landscape than conventional basins.
|