Hear the buzz: S&C Electric brings new pollinator garden to Rogers Park

On the northwest corner of S&C Electric Co.’s 46-acre campus, the garden features 45 plant species and serves as a safe haven for birds, butterflies and bees.

SHARE Hear the buzz: S&C Electric brings new pollinator garden to Rogers Park
Brian Kane, Senior Manager, Safety Environmental Services with S&C Electric Company sits on a bench in the Arlys Conrad Memorial Park and Native Pollinator Garden, located at the corner of W. Pratt Blvd. and N. Ridge Blvd. on S&C Electric Company’s campus in the Rodger Park neighborhood, Tuesday, Aug. 15, 2023.

Brian Kane, a senior manager at S&C Electric Co., helped lead the effort to create a native pollinator garden on the company’s Rogers Park campus.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Rogers Park resident Neil Smith’s daily summer strolls with his 5-year-old daughter, Amelia, often include a stop to see the colorful wildflowers, buzzing bees and chirping birds at the intersection of Pratt and Ridge boulevards.

“It’s a pleasure to walk by and see this,” Smith said. “Any green space in the city, especially for bees and butterflies, is crucial.”

There wasn’t always so much to see on the street corner. Smith watched with anticipation last year as a team of landscapers built a garden on the once-vacant patch of grass.

S&C Electric Co., a Rogers Park-based electrical equipment maker, last month unveiled the Arlys Conrad Memorial Park and Native Pollinator Garden, a 12,5000-square-foot garden on the northwest corner of the company’s 46-acre campus. The garden is the result of a nearly four-year effort.

In the garden, bees, birds and butterflies flutter in harmony amid a mix of colorful prairie and woodland plants that bloom year round. The park is named after Arlys Conrad, the late wife of S&C’s longtime president John Conrad, who was known for her green thumb and dedication to the company. She died in 2007.

While the park was always open to the public, it lacked much color and life, said Brian Kane, S&C’s senior safety and environmental affairs manager, who helped lead the garden project.

Now, the garden boasts 45 plant species showcasing shades of purple, yellow, red and orange. Kane said he likes the garden’s purple coneflowers, which provide lots of nectar for bees and butterflies.

The Arlys Conrad Memorial Park and Native Pollinator Garden, sits located at the corner of W. Pratt Blvd. and N. Ridge Blvd. on S&C Electric Company’s campus in the Rogers Park neighborhood, Tuesday, Aug. 15, 2023.

The Arlys Conrad Memorial Park and Native Pollinator Garden at the corner of Pratt and Ridge boulevards on S&C Electric Co.’s Rogers Park campus.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

S&C, one of the largest employers on the city’s North Side that’s been in Rogers Park for over 75 years, is constantly looking for ways to expand its environmental efforts, Kane said. The company sought out a partnership with the Field Museum after seeing a presentation in 2019 about the museum’s Keller Science Action Center transforming industrial land across the Midwest into native gardens.

“We got to do some fun field trips back and forth, looking at our campus, and then we went and visited the Field Museum that has some amazing native gardens,” Kane said.

S&C employees explored the Field Museum’s Rice Native Gardens and picked out the specific plants they liked, crafting a vision for what a garden would look like at the company’s campus.

Work on the project began in spring 2022 as the people at S&C partnered with landscaping company Pizzo & Associates Ltd. to do the actual planting. Then, they waited.

“We watched [the garden] meticulously all summer,” Kane said. “We did see some nice progress late summer into the fall, and that gave us the first idea that this is gonna look pretty nice. And now, when you come this year, it’s just amazing.”

More than just a peaceful space for visitors to enjoy, Kane said the garden increases biodiversity in the community, pulls carbon from the atmosphere, and provides food and shelter for wildlife.

The Arlys Conrad Memorial Park before it was converted into a native pollinator garden.

The Arlys Conrad Memorial Park in March 2022 before it was converted into a native pollinator garden.

Provided

Ald. Maria Hadden (49th), a member of the City Council Environmental Protection and Energy Committee, said S&C’s undertaking “sets a powerful example for bigger electric corporations.”

“I believe the pollinator [garden] will serve as a model for sustainable urban design and community collaboration,” Hadden said. “Community members stand to gain not only a respite for reflection and enjoyment but also an urban oasis with fresher and cleaner air.”

Catherine Hu, a conservation ecologist at the Keller Science Action Center, said she appreciated seeing a company like S&C take on a community sustainability project.

Hu, who made the online field guide identifying some of the plants in the park, said the garden provides community members an opportunity to learn about the importance of native gardens, which feature plant species that grow naturally in an area to support pollinators and other wildlife.

“The plants particularly are important because they are the bottom of the food chain and they’re supporting the insects, which are supporting birds and small mammals, and then it goes up the food chain,” Hu said.

Kane said he hopes to see more community involvement with the garden and envisions partnering with local schools to hold events that allow students to learn about the plants and help with seed harvesting.

“We hope to be an inspiration to other local companies and organizations that can see how simple or relatively straightforward a project it is to plant a native landscaped garden that can be so impactful visually to the local community,” Kane said.

The Latest
Around 20 royal fans and their pet corgis gathered to walk their dogs outside the palace in central London to remember Queen Elizabeth II a year after her death.
Ma Operio, 61, was found unresponsive with a zip tie around her neck Wednesday in the 4400 block of Natchez Avenue. She died Sunday evening. A suspect is in custody.
‘Every step of the way I was almost like, “This isn’t actually going to happen,” ’ Austin Paramore said of his journey to get his graphic novel published.
About 7:05 p.m. Sunday, the boy was near the sidewalk in the 6000 block of South Elisabeth Street when he was shot in the head, police said. He’s in critical condition.
The Cubs beat the Reds 15-7 on Sunday to spit four games in Cincinnati.