Skip to content
  • Subscribe
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
  • Instagram
  • Email
  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Entertainment
  • Features
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe to Ray’s Columns
Suburban Chicagoland

Suburban Chicagoland

Original News, Features & Opinion on Chicago, Illinois and America

  • About
    • About
    • Advertise
    • Our Writers
      • Ray Hanania
      • Bill Lipinski
      • Biography: Aaron Hanania
    • Terms of Service
    • Privacy Policy
    • Reach Out
  • Sections
    • Restaurant Reviews
    • Events
    • Opinion
    • News
    • Features
    • Seniors
    • Comic Strip
  • Library
    • “MIdnight Flight” Online Book
      • Midnight Flight Book Overview
      • Midnight Flight Introduction
      • Midnight Flight Chapter 1
      • Midnight Flight Chapter 2
      • Midnight Flight Chapter 3
      • Midnight Flight Chapter 4
      • Midnight Flight Chapter 5
      • Midnight Flight Chapter 6
      • Midnight Flight Chapter 7
      • Midnight Flight Chapter 8
      • Midnight Flight Chapter 9
      • Midnight Flight Chapter 10
      • Midnight Flight Chapter 11
      • Midnight Flight Chapter 12
      • Midnight Flight Chapter 13
    • Villages, Cities & Towns
    • Federal Office Holders
    • County Officials
    • Legislators
  • Subscribe to Ray’s Columns
  • Comment
  • Podcast
    • Ray Hanania on Politics
    • Two Guys on Politics
    • Hanania on Tiktok
  • News Wire
  • Archive 2004-2013
  • Toggle search form
  • Sullivan's Steakhouse server Jairo with plate of steak options
    Sullivan’s Steakhouse makes every night special with family and friends Business
  • Police Crime Tape
    Federal Grand Jury Indicts Man on Terrorism and Arson Charges for Lighting Train Passenger on Fire and Setting Chicago City Hall Ablaze Days Earlier Crime
  • Former Congresswoman Marie Newman endorses Joseph “Joey” Ruzevich for Congress in the Illinois 6th Congressional District Bridgeview
  • father in wheel chair Leving
    Disabled Dad United with Daughter for First Christmas Together Dads' Rights
  • Pekau diatribe expels residents Feb 5 2024 board meeting on ceasefire
    Status of Temporary Restraining Order Against Former Mayor Keith Pekau for Releasing Confidential Village Information Crime
  • Illinois Senator Michael Hastings addressing the Orland Township Democratic Organization Wednesday Oct. 12, 2022
    Hastings law modernizes missing persons investigations starting Jan. 1 Crime
  • Pastor Ira Acree leads Pastors in calling for property tax reforms in Cook County at a press conference Dec. 15, 2025
    Cook County Pastors from the south and west sides and suburbs urge property tax reform Cook County
  • Walter Adamczyk Republican Secretary of State Illinois March 17, 2025
    Walter Adamczyk statement proposes Honoring Illinois Veterans with “Real Service” elections
  • 12-16-25 Leving Interviewed by CBS 2 Chicago
    Attorney Jeffery M. Leving to Discuss Fathers’ Rights on CBS Chicago Ch. 2 Dads' Rights
  • Pastor John Harrell, candidate for the 8th Illinois State House seat vacated by LaShawn Ford in the March 2026 election
    John Harrell hosts taxpayer review workshops for residents, urges extension of appeals period and tax hike limits Chicago
  • father daughter walking Leving
    Leving Team’s Victory Saved Dad’s Two Boys from Danger Dads' Rights
  • Kat Abughazaleh 9th DIstrict Congress 2026 candidate democrat
    Kat Abughazaleh Raises $1 Million in Q4, Continuing Record-Breaking Grassroots Momentum in IL-09 elections
  • Cook County Treasurer Maria Papas
    Financial planning tool offers free online help to budget late tax payments Blogger
  • Village of Orland Park News Release Logo
    Orland Park Statement on Settlement of William Sanchez vs. Village of Orland Park, et al., Lawsuit Government
  • Cook County Treasurer Maria Papas
    Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas column explores options to help pay property taxes by Dec. 15 Cook County
Anti-shoreline erosion projects courtesy of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR)

Illinois tackling harmful Lake Michigan shoreline erosion at Illinois Beach State Park

Posted on January 12, 2023January 13, 2023 By Ray Hanania No Comments on Illinois tackling harmful Lake Michigan shoreline erosion at Illinois Beach State Park
SHARE THIS STORY
            
 
  

Illinois tackling harmful Lake Michigan shoreline erosion at Illinois Beach State Park

Two projects aim to curb erosion of beach and natural habitats

Two ground-breaking projects underway at Illinois Beach State Park will help protect precious shoreline from erosion caused by Lake Michigan waves and inform future decisions about how to blunt the effects of erosion and climate change, Governor JB Pritzker, the Illinois Department of Natural Resources and the Illinois Capital Development Board announced today.

Illinois Beach State Park in Lake County, home to unique prairie and wetland habitat and a beloved local and regional recreational draw, features the last remaining natural shoreline in the state. However, the shore is constantly battered by Lake Michigan waves, making it a priority for preservation and mitigation efforts.

Some parts of the park’s coastline have receded by as much as 100 feet in one year. Aerial photos and maps show how the shoreline, roads and dune ecosystems have been drastically altered; visitors can see evidence of some of the damage in person.

“Illinois’ lakefronts are a national treasure and one of our greatest natural resources, and it’s essential that we preserve these spaces for future generations to love and learn from,” Governor Pritzker said.

Anti-shoreline erosion projects courtesy of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR)
Anti-shoreline erosion projects courtesy of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR)

 

“This historic, ambitious project from IDNR and its partners is a commitment that Illinois will continue to tackle the effects of the climate crisis head on and work to build a cleaner, more sustainable Illinois for everyone to enjoy.”

 

Largest capital project in IDNR history will protect shoreline

The larger of the two projects is construction of a revolutionary system to preserve 2.2 miles of Illinois Beach State Park shoreline. This is a $73 million project, which is believed to be the largest capital project in the history of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR). Funding for the project was secured by the Capital Development Board (CDB) and made possible through the historic Rebuild Illinois capital plan. Construction is set to begin in spring 2023.

“It is a priority for IDNR and the State of Illinois to do everything we can to protect the precious public shoreline at Illinois Beach and the native species that live there before they both vanish forever,” said IDNR Director Colleen Callahan.

Anti-shoreline erosion projects courtesy of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR)
Anti-shoreline erosion projects courtesy of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR)

Rather than stopping erosion by building walls or high-profile coastal structures, the design seeks to guide and direct the movement of the sand instead of simply trying to prevent its movement. The approach uses creatively shaped and formulated islands and submerged reef structures, positioned out in the lake rather than built directly along the shore. These structures serve multiple roles, blocking and reducing the erosive force of incoming waves, redirecting nearshore currents, and providing a new home to aquatic and avian species that live along the shoreline.

The unique solution is the result of more than a year of computer simulations and intense physical modeling to explore how Lake Michigan waves would behave passing around the structures and ultimately transform the shoreline. To test and verify design performance, consultants built a scale model in a giant hydraulic laboratory in the United Kingdom – larger than a soccer field – to replicate conditions along 11,000 feet of Lake Michigan shoreline.

More than 100 variations of possible shoreline solutions were tested until an effective solution was found. The lessons learned through this trailblazing effort set new standards and guidelines for how living shoreline design can manage highly erosive wave forces while remaining as natural as possible.

The completed project will utilize about 250,000 tons of rock fill and armor material, creating 22 submerged and low emergent stone breakwaters covering 12.2 acres of lakebed and renourishing the shoreline with nearly 430,000 cubic yards of sand.

This goal of this massive effort is to protect critical ecological habitats like the 21st Street wetlands and the North Dunes Nature Preserve Trails, as well as vulnerable infrastructure like the Lake County intake plant.

Visitors will not see much of the protective structures because they will be underwater. Protecting the lake views and natural character of Illinois Beach State Park were a priority.

“This approach reflects a broader change in the way shorelines are being protected around the globe,” Callahan said. “Our project explores new ground and sets new standards for what living shorelines can be and what we can achieve in the Great Lakes.”

The Illinois Capital Development Board (CDB) will oversee the project’s design and construction in accordance with the protocol for state-appropriated projects.

“The construction at Illinois State Beach is critical to stabilizing shoreline erosion and ensuring the property is preserved,” said CDB Executive Director Jim Underwood.

‘Rubble ridges’ pilot project could become model for other states

The second project involves the installation of stone “rubble ridges” in Lake Michigan off the southern end of the Illinois Beach State Park coastline. This pilot project is an example of an innovative design focused on development of lower impact and less expensive measures that can protect shoreline.

During the summer of 2021, crews finished constructing three 750-foot-long rubble ridges in the shallow water of Lake Michigan about 500 feet offshore of Illinois Beach State Park. Built of more than 10,000 tons of stones that were placed by a crane, the ridges are intended to work in concert to lessen storm wave impact and protect the eroding beach and unique ecosystem in the dunes.

The ridges are submerged in the water to preserve the view from the shoreline. They also create fish habitat by offering small, protected pore spaces within the structures – in effect, protecting habitat with habitat

“This project represents an important step toward the future of Great Lakes coastal resiliency,” said Ania Bayers, natural resources manager of the IDNR Coastal Management Program. “It’s also a testament to the importance of interagency collaboration, a reliance on good science, and innovative design to preserve the most basic and important qualities of the places Illinoisans love.”

Each year, winter wreaks havoc on Lake Michigan communities as waves and ice pummel the coast. More recently, storms combined with record-high lake levels have been especially damaging to the shoreline.

“From 2012 to 2020, a period coinciding with record-low to near record-high lake levels, the north unit of the park alone lost an estimated 670,570 cubic yards of sediment,” said Robin Mattheus, coastal geologist of the Illinois State Geological Survey. “To help put that into number into perspective, that’s enough to fill about 50,000 dump trucks.”

Coastal Management Program staff began working three years ago with community stakeholders, scientists and a team of design researchers to better understand changes to the coastal landscape and develop a solution to the erosion problem.

The resulting rubble ridges will be carefully monitored by scientists during the next five years with support from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA). Their study will help inform coastal protection across the Great Lakes and may lead to better in-water habitat and more affordable shoreline protection alternatives.

Construction of the rubble ridges is anticipated to cost an estimated $1.5 million.

Monitoring of the project is performed by staff from ISGS and the Illinois Natural History Survey, who look for changes in the landscape, lakebed, area hydrodynamics, and habitat usage through an array of instruments and techniques. One such technique uses eight monitoring “cages” that were designed and fabricated to be placed on the surrounding lakebed, collecting hydrodynamic data from waves as they pass through the project area.

Collaborators with IDNR’s Coastal Management Program on the project include Healthy Port Futures, Great Lakes Protection Fund, U.S. EPA, Illinois Natural History Survey, ISGS, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and NOAA.

newswire info
  • Author
  • Recent Posts
Ray Hanania
Ray Hanania
Ray Hanania is an award-winning opinion columnist, author & former Chicago City Hall reporter (1977-1992). A veteran who served during the Vietnam War and the recipient of four SPJ Peter Lisagor Awards for column writing, Hanania writes weekly opinion columns on mainstream American & Chicagoland topics for the Southwest News-Herald, Des Plaines Valley News, the Regional News, The Reporter Newspapers, and Suburban Chicagoland.  

His award winning columns can be found at www.HANANIA.COM Subscribe FREE today

Hanania also writes about Middle East issues for the Arab News, and The Arab Daily News criticizing government policies in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Hanania was named "Best Ethnic American Columnist" by the New America Media in November 2007, and is the 2009 recipient of the SPJ National Sigma Delta Chi Award for column writing.

Email Ray Hanania at [email protected].

Follow RayHanania at Twitter
Ray Hanania
Latest posts by Ray Hanania (see all)
  • Sullivan’s Steakhouse makes every night special with family and friends - December 19, 2025
  • Federal Grand Jury Indicts Man on Terrorism and Arson Charges for Lighting Train Passenger on Fire and Setting Chicago City Hall Ablaze Days Earlier - December 19, 2025
  • Former Congresswoman Marie Newman endorses Joseph “Joey” Ruzevich for Congress in the Illinois 6th Congressional District - December 19, 2025
NPV: 115
  • Tweet

SHARE THIS STORY
            
 
  
 
 
 
           
Chicago, Environment, Features, News, Regional Midwest Tags:Chicago water front, climate change, Environment, erosion, IDNR, Illinois Beach State Park in Lake County, Illinois Department of Natural Resources, Lake Michigan, prairie, shoreline, shoreline erosion, State of Illinois, wetlands

Post navigation

Previous Post: Milwaukee County sells 90 lots for single family homes
Next Post: Paul Vallas demands Lightfoot explain email scandal, and use of government resources for political campaign

Related Posts

  • Dads' Rights Attorney Jeffery M. Leving
    Leving firm CLE to address strategies for litigating vs pro se parties Civil Rights
  • 05-23-25 Jeffery M. Leving
    Chicago dad’s court victory kept sons safe at home Dads' Rights
  • WGN TV's moderators Tahman Bradley and Lourdes Duarte
    WGN Mayoral forum gives candidates chance to sparkle Blogger
  • Hyundai Sonata. Photo courtesy of Hyundai
    Hyundai and AAA Insurers Collaborate to Offer Insurance Options for Customers Affected by Method of Theft Popularized on TikTok Business
  • Congressman Sean Casten
    Illinois to receive $2,250,129,111 for roads, bridges under Democrats’ Infrastructure Law Federal
  • Orland Township Santa Letters Seniors
    Orland Township’s Holiday Letters to Elders Program Baby Boomers

More Related Articles

Seniors enjoy activities at Orland Township. Photo courtesy of Orland Township Orland Township Activity Center to Host February Events Baby Boomers
ComEd brings energy efficiency to Illinois Consumers News
Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas has hosted a display of Christmas Trees from around the world each year since 2003. Photo courtesy of Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas Pappas displays Christmas trees from around the world Editors Pick
Mobile Stroke Unit from Rush Hospital available to Cicero residents. Photo courtesy of the Town of Cicero Cicero makes enhanced medical services available in emergencies Health
Alexandra Holt appointed to the RTA. Photo courtesy LinkedIn Emanuel names Alexandra Holt to RTA Board News
Orland Township Senior American Idol Jim Spoto Named Orland Township’s Senior American Idol Entertainment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Login with your Social ID
  • OPINION
  • Cook County Treasurer Maria Papas
    Financial planning tool offers free online help to budget late tax payments
    December 11, 2025
  • Cook County Treasurer Maria Papas
    Homeowners shocked by tax hikes should read bills to find out where their money goes
    November 30, 2025
  • Cook County Treasurer Maria Papas
    Illinois expands property tax breaks for veterans to include World War II vets
    October 31, 2025
  • Cook County Treasurer Maria Papas
    Your Mortgage Company May Pay Your Taxes — But You Still Need to Watch
    October 17, 2025
  • Mohammed Faheem The Lightning Strike Radio Show small
    The Politicization of the Nobel Peace Prize — and Trump’s Fury Over Losing Again
    October 11, 2025
Subscribe to Ray Hanania's column graphic

Enter Your Email to Subscribe to Ray Hanania’s Columns

  • The-Kings-Pawn-Book-300-x-300.png

Mohammed Faheem The Lightning Strike Radio

Restaurant Reviews

Photo: Sullivan's Steakhouse Lobster Tempura
Restaurant Reviews
  • NEWS
  • Sullivan's Steakhouse server Jairo with plate of steak options
    Sullivan’s Steakhouse makes every night special with family and friends
    December 19, 2025
  • Police Crime Tape
    Federal Grand Jury Indicts Man on Terrorism and Arson Charges for Lighting Train Passenger on Fire and Setting Chicago City Hall Ablaze Days Earlier
    December 19, 2025
  • Former Congresswoman Marie Newman endorses Joseph “Joey” Ruzevich for Congress in the Illinois 6th Congressional District
    December 19, 2025
  • father in wheel chair Leving
    Disabled Dad United with Daughter for First Christmas Together
    December 19, 2025
  • Pekau diatribe expels residents Feb 5 2024 board meeting on ceasefire
    Status of Temporary Restraining Order Against Former Mayor Keith Pekau for Releasing Confidential Village Information
    December 17, 2025
John Kass Columns

Order the book PoweR PR; Ethnic Activists Guide to Strategic Communications

YOUTUBE VIDEOS

CLICK TO SUBSCRIBE TO RAY HANANIA'S YOUTUBE VIDEOS


Click here to view the video on YouTube or use the widget below.

Follow Ray Hanania at
Twitter
Facebook
TitkTok
BlueSky
RayHanania Columns

Creative Commons License
All works on this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Do not edit original work. Give credit to the original source.

Categories

Copyright © 2022 Suburban Chicagoland & Urban Strategies Group

Powered by PressBook Premium theme