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              |  |  | Image courtesy of Kate Joyce | 
            
              | The education opportunities at the Chicago  Botanic Garden lead in scope and depth among public garden programs. The  Regenstein Learning Campus is a new environment which builds on these core  strengths by enhancing existing programs and engaging new audiences. It  significantly extends the Garden’s commitment to early childhood education and  enables training of wide audience of early childhood caregivers and educators  in the developmental theory and practice of nature play. The client hired Mikyoung  Kim Design for the concept, and Jacobs/Ryan Associates (JRA) to adapt the  concept into biddable design documents at the same time as Booth Hansen  developed documents for the building. The client asked JRA to deliver a project  within the design intent of the concept, while incorporating evolving client  direction, expanding the Garden’s woody and herbaceous plant collection, making  the site more accessible, saving existing trees and targeting a LEED Platinum  rating.  JRA carried "hands-on"  services from design development through construction close out. |  | 
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              |  | Image courtesy of Kate Joyce | 
            
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              | The seven acre project starts from the south  with a paved drive curving into the campus, offering a view of the plantings of  the Grunsfeld Growing Garden to the northeast, the curved building of the  Learning Center to the north and the relocated butterfly exhibition tent to the  west.  A large, circular planting bed  sits in the center of a circle turn, inspiring the senses with plants of many  colors, shapes, and textures. |  | Direct drop-off, accessible parking for  special-needs visitors and a bike parking pad facilitate wheeled visitors while  adjacent, planted pathways allow pedestrians to move from the parking lot to  the Campus and into additional areas of the Chicago Botanic Garden, including  the adjacent Kleinman Family Cove to the west of the site. | 
            
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              | Image courtesy of Brian Fritz Photography | 
            
              |  |  | The south end of the building opens onto a terrace  overlooking a multi-sensory discovery garden. The Nature Play Garden invites  the sort of exploratory play essential to instilling an appreciation of plants  and the natural world. Visitors of all ages and abilities appreciate the  garden’s plant-centered outdoor classroom with its engaging, play-inspiring  landscape of trees, grassy knolls, water, flowers, boulders, logs, and places  of discovery. 
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              | Image courtesy of Kate Joyce | 
            
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              | Natural landforms and paths encourage parents to allow even their  smallest children to freely explore the area. The landforms which include  rolling hillocks and an outdoor amphitheater were carefully sculpted with soil  and fibers, and then sodded with a carpet of lawn. The design incorporates the  concept of the “dignity of risk,” where children of all abilities are safe but  have the opportunity to push themselves to the next level.  Site materials are  of local and sustainable manufacture.   The stonework for the runnels, fire pit, pavers and boulders were  carefully selected from Wisconsin  to  match the fit and finish of the Garden's other existing features. |  |  | 
            
              | Image courtesy of Kate Joyce | 
            
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              |  |  | The project planting includes maple, aspen, and  redbud groves, abundant perennials, an expansive lawn that slopes downward with  sculpted landforms, a willow tunnel, and rooms of arborvitaes and hornbeam. A  runnel looping around the lower floodplain features a boulder fountain, large  boulders, and loose parts play areas with logs to climb over and through. Above  the butterfly exhibit and around a saved Norway spruce and large overcup oak, a  winding accessible path leads uphill to a syrup-tapping sugar maple grove where  a custom limestone and steel fire-pit is surrounded by log benches and picnic  tables. Transplanted Freeman maples lend overall scale to the project, and  transplanted evergreens screen Lake Cook Road traffic while helping to keep the  tree budget in line. Behind the building, two courtyards enclosed by hedges  extend the classrooms from inside to out, while service areas are also hedged.  The northwest corner of the site is a rain garden and the northeast corner is a berry patch. | 
            
              | Image courtesy of Kate Joyce | 
            
              | Upon opening, an education staff member  wrote:  “It was really thrilling to see  the joy, excitement and curiosity the children expressed during their  play.  Several were fascinated with  trying to figure out how the runnel worked.   One girl spent time identifying the tallest hill, the steepest hill, the  shortest hill, the biggest hill, etc.   Adults relaxed on the benches and in the valleys as the children  played.  Kids all gave the experience a  big thumbs-up and exclaimed it was ‘awesome’ noting the hills and the water  were their favorite parts.  My own child  and several staff children did not want to leave at the end.” |  | Client: Chicago Botanic Garden; Architect: Booth Hansen; Concept Design: Mikyoung Kim Design and Brown + Associates; Owner's Representative: John Doherty Associates; General Contractor: Turner Construction; Landscape Contractor: Clauss Brother, Inc. | 
            
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              | See also: The Chicago Tribune featured the project in “Chicago  Botanic Garden Grows with $28M Learning Campus”  http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/ct-chicago-botanic-new-learning-center-ent-0825-20160824-story.html It was also  featured in Curbed in the article “A look inside Chicago Botanic Garden’s new $28 Million Regenstein  Learning Center”http://chicago.curbed.com/2016/9/13/12897776/chicago-architecture-botanic-garden-regenstein-learning-center
 and Chicago  Now, in “The Chicago Botanic Garden's Regenstein Learning Campus is Something  Special”http://www.chicagonow.com/show-me-chicago/2016/09/the-chicago-botanic-gardens-regenstein-learning-campus-is-something-special/
 The Glencoe News wrote about the Campus in the article “Regenstein  Learning Campus opens at Chicago Botanic Garden”http://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/glencoe/news/ct-gln-regenstein-learning-center-opens-tl-0915-20160912-story.html
 For information about visiting the Regenstein Learning  Campus, http://www.chicagobotanic.org/education/campus
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              | Image courtesy of Kate Joyce |