At 1,300 acres, Forest Park is one of the largest urban parks in the U.S. More than a scenic backdrop to St. Louis that draws 12 million annual visitors, the Park is a gathering place for people of all ages, races, and economic backgrounds. When Forest Park Forever, a nonprofit conservancy that partners with the City of St. Louis to steward Forest Park, sought a plan to ensure the Park’s ongoing health, diversity and sustainability, they turned to a planning team led by Biohabitats.Recognizing that the Park’s rich history, regional ecological and cultural significance, and Biohabitats’ deeply held conviction that parks should embody ecological democracy, the team developed an approach that rested on three elements. The final plan needed to move natural resource management firmly to the forefront of urban ecological theory and practice, provide a scientifically defensible framework for how natural resources factor into future management decisions, and cultivate long-term stewardship.
Envisioned as a multi-phased series of collaborative efforts, the project began with the creation an ecological baseline of the Park’s physical conditions. Fieldwork characterized landscape disturbance, health of the existing ecosystems (prairies, waterways, and forests) and opportunities for restoration and enhancement, and areas of high ecological concern.
Biohabitats applied the science of ecology to build a framework based on restoration, management, and maintenance strategies that will work for Forest Park in the long term. Implementing this plan will allow Park managers to enhance ongoing resilience by proactively address invasive plants, wildlife management, integrated water strategies, and conservation priorities.
Owner: Forest Park Forever
Bioregion: Big Rivers/Ozark
Ecoregion: River Hills
Physiographic province: Central Lowland
Watershed: Judys Branch-Mississippi River
Collaborators: Conservation Design Forum, DG2 Design Landscape Architecture, ETM Associates, LLC, Missouri Botanical Garden, Tim Person & Associates, LLC