Gerald W. Adelmann

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Gerald W. Adelmann
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Born (1949-08-13) August 13, 1949 (age 74)
Lockport, Illinois
NationalityAmerican
Alma materGeorgetown University
Occupation
  • Civic
  • Environmental leader

Gerald “Jerry” W. Adelmann (born August 13, 1949) is an American civic and environmental leader. Adelmann currently serves as the President and CEO of Openlands, a Chicago-based non-profit conservation organization founded in 1963 that protects land, water, and wildlife throughout the Chicago metropolitan area. Previously, he served as the President of The Canal Corridor Association, leading an effort to establish the Illinois & Michigan Canal National Heritage Area.

Early life and education

Jerry Adelmann was born and raised in Lockport, Illinois and is a sixth-generation resident. He graduated from Joliet Catholic High School in 1967, then attended Georgetown University, where he was the first graduate with a major in the history of art and architecture, earning a BA degree in 1971. As part of his undergraduate honors thesis, he worked with the Smithsonian American Art Museum to support an exhibit on the art of Romaine Brooks,[1] an American-born artist who lived most of her life in Paris. After graduation, he spent several years in Europe and took classes in architectural and urban history at the Sorbonne. During this time, he became interested in European models of landscape-scale conservation and historic preservation, especially the reuse and modernization of buildings.

Upon his return to the U.S. in 1973, he enrolled at George Washington University with the support of a pre-doctoral fellowship from the Smithsonian, and eventually earned an MPhil degree in American Studies in 1985. He received an honorary doctorate from Lewis University in 1986.[2]

Career

Canal Corridor Association and Lockport Historic Preservation

In 1980, Adelmann partnered with the Open Lands Project (later Openlands) to explore a new approach to national parks with the expressed goal of furthering the interests of the communities, industries, and businesses along the I&M Canal.[3] In 1982, Adelmann founded the Upper Illinois Valley Association, later renamed the Canal Corridor Association.[4] Two years later, the association’s work led to federal designation of the Illinois and Michigan Canal National Heritage Area, the first of 62 federally-protected National Heritage Areas in the U.S. Before and during his tenure at Canal Corridor Association, Adelmann also worked to preserve historic sites in Lockport, including Central Square, the Gaylord Building, and the Adelmann Block.[5]

Openlands

In 1988, Adelmann assumed the role of executive director of Openlands and was later named its president and CEO. Under Adelmann’s leadership, Openlands experienced a period of expanded growth and influence by fostering a collective approach to environmental stewardship through collaborations with diverse stakeholders, including governmental bodies, local communities, environmental advocates, and private sector partners. He spearheaded initiatives to preserve and restore natural landscapes, foster ecological diversity, promote sustainable land use practices. During his tenure, Openlands conceived, organized, and supported completion of several large conservation projects that had a major impact on the Chicago region, including among others:

  • Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie, the first designated tallgrass prairie in the U.S. on 19,000 acres of the former Joliet Army Ammunition Plant.[6]
  • Hackmatack National Wildlife Refuge, the first U.S. federal wildlife refuge within 100 miles of Chicago, protecting natural and agricultural lands within a broader 30,000-acre refuge.[7]
  • O’Hare Wetlands Restoration Program, which restored six wetlands in the Chicago region to more than offset the loss of wetlands due to O’Hare International Airport expansion in the early 2000s.[8]
  • Openlands Lakeshore Preserve, the restoration of 72 acres of Lake Michigan lakefront by 2008 on the site of the former Fort Sheridan.[9]

Adelmann played a leadership role in the founding of Chicago Wilderness Alliance, a coalition of over 250 partner organizations encompassing roughly 6,000 conservation practitioners across the region.[10] He led the creation of several Openlands initiatives focused on improving ecosystems in the City of Chicago, including Treekeepers (1991), an urban forestry program that trains and certifies volunteers to care for trees on public property, and Space to Grow (2014), a collaboration with the Healthy Schools Campaign to create environmentally sustainable and educationally innovative Chicago schoolyards.[11]

Adelmann collaborated on several major Chicago regional planning initiatives, including the the 21st Century Open Space Plan (1990), The Northeastern Illinois Regional Greenways Plan (1992), the Northeastern Illinois Water Trails Plan (1999), the Calumet Area Land Use Plan (1999), and Where Worlds Connect: A New Vision for Chicago’s Museum Campus (2022).[12]

Drawing on his art history education, Adelmann incorporated the arts into environmental outreach and education, organizing several exhibits and performances in the region, including:

  • David Philpot, Mr. Imagination, and Kevin Orth, “Reclamation and Transformation: Three Self-Taught Chicago Artists,” at the Terra Museum of American Art.
  • Terry Evans, “In Place of Prairie,” the Art Institute of Chicago.
  • Terry Evans, “Revealing Chicago: An Aerial Portrait,” Millennium Park, Chicago.
  • Tonia Ko, “Plain, Air,” world premiere, performed by the Spektral Quartet at the Openlands Lakeshore Preserve.

Adelmann has chaired the City of Chicago’s Nature and Wildlife Committee and served as Chair and Vice Chair at the Center for Humans and Nature. He is emeritus member of National Board of Advisors of the National Trust for Historic Preservation and an honorary member of the American Society of Landscape Architects.[13] He also served as the Vice Chair of the board of the Illinois State Museum and the Illinois Nature Preserves Commission, among other foundations, commissions, and not-for-profits.

Collaborations with China and Myanmar

In the 1990s, Adelmann worked on historical preservation and conservation projects in Yunnan Province in China under the Center for US-China Arts Exchange at Columbia University, where he served on their advisory board then headed by Professor Chou Wen-chung. He brought collaborators to the project including The Field Museum of Natural History and the architectural firm Skidmore, Ownings & Merrill, and many others. In Yunnan, Adelmann focused on encouraging conservancy and respect for the rich cultural and natural heritage of the region.[14] He facilitated collaborations between local art scenes and governmental bodies in Beijing and Chicago, including the art installation “City Windows” by Qiao Xiaoguang at O’Hare International Airport depicting paper cut outs of Chicago and Beijing landmarks.[15] Since 2005, Adelmann has served as an international advisor to the Yangon Heritage Trust in Myanmar, which works on the comprehensive planning of the historical capital including the preservation of buildings in the historical core of Yangon.[16]

Awards and Recognition

  • 2023 Openlands Conservation Leadership Award[17]
  • 2023 Crain’s Chicago Business Notable Leader in Sustainability[18]
  • 2013 Frances K. Hutchinson Medal, Garden Club of America, for distinguished service to conservation[19] The Garden Club of America. Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  • 2012 Chicago Botanical Gardens Chicago Botanic Garden Hutchinson Medal
  • 2002 Kodak American Greenways Outstanding Achievement Award

Personal life

Adelmann resides in Chicago and Lockport, where is active in preserving the 1842 Robert Milne House.

Publications

  • Adelmann, Gerald, and Rochelle Davis (2015). “Green Schoolyards: A Growing Movement Supporting Health, Education and Connection with Nature.” Edited by Claire Marcy and Jaime Zaplatosch. Healthy Schools Campaign and Openlands.[1]
  • Adelmann, Gerald (1998). “Reworking the Landscape, Chicago Style.” The Hastings Center Report 28, no. 6 (1998): S6–11. [2].
  • Davis, Rochelle, and Gerald Adelmann (7 June 2022). “Is It Time to Reimagine the American Schoolyard?” Next City. [3]
  • Adelmann, Gerald (30 March 2023) “Opinion: The next mayoral administration must take the environment off the back burner,” Crain’s Chicago Business. [4]
  • Adelmann, Gerald, Judy Pollock, Annette Prince and Douglas Stotz (14 March 2022), “A Casino on Chicago’s lakefront? That’s a deadly gamble for migratory birds,” Chicago Tribune. [5]
  • "Sustainable Development: Opportunities and Challenges for Yunnan Province," published by the Center for US-China Arts Exchange. [6]
  • Stotz, Douglas F, Emily J Harris, Debra K Moskovits, Ken Hao, Shaoliang Yi, and Gerald W Adelmann, editors (April 2003) "Rapid Biological and Social Inventories, Volume 4: China: Yunnan, Southern Gaoligongshan," The Field Museum of Natural History.

References

  1. Breeskin, Adelyn D. (1971). ‘’Romaine Brooks: Thief of Souls. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Smithsonian Institution’ (Washington), February 24 – April 4, 1971. LCCN: 79150515.
  2. Lewis University, ""Honorary Degrees Bestowed by Lewis University."". Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  3. Legner, Linda (March 1982). “National Park Here? Why Not, says Chicago’s Super-Salesman,” Historic Preservation, Vol. 34., Issue 2, pp. 26-31. Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  4. NPS Oral History Collection (HFCA 1817), National Heritage Areas Administrative History Project, "Oral History of Gerald W. Adelmann, October 4, 2017"., Interview conducted by Antionette Condo. Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  5. Malone-France, Katherine (17 March 2015), ""All in the Family: Barbara Donnelley Dishes About Lockport's Gaylord Building,"". National Trust for Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2023-10-30. U.S. Department of the Interior, Historic Conservation and Recreation Service (1980). ""Lockport, Illinois: an HCRS Project Report."" (PDF). Retrieved 2023-10-30. Sullivan, Barbara (30 January 1993). ""Place with a Past,"". Chicago Tribune.
  6. Spencer, LeAnn and William Presecky (12 February 1996). “Peace Set to Bloom in Joliet: Clinton’s Signing Ok’s Conversion of Arsenal,” Chicago Tribune.
  7. “Grass-roots passion makes Hackmatack dream come true,” Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL), January 22, 2013; Openlands, ""Hackmatack: Path to Preservation."". Retrieved 2023-10-30. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, ""Hackmatack National Wildlife Refuge."". Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  8. Chicago Department of Aviation, ""O'Hare Wetlands Restoration."". Retrieved 2023-10-30. Openlands, ""Wetlands Restoration Through the O'Hare Modernization Program."". Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  9. Storch, Charles (25 October 2007). “Openlands Project on Fast Track,” Chicago Tribune, October 25, 2007. Trotter, Gregory (2 June 2014). ""Lakefront restoration near fort is on agenda,"". Chicago Tribune. Openlands, ""Openlands Lakeshore Preserve."". Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  10. Platt, Rutherford (17 May 2006). ""Chicago Wilderness: Flagship of the Urban Biodiversity Movement."" (PDF).
  11. Vaisvilas, Frank (12 March 2019). ""Openlands recruiting, training tree stewards to help increase Southland's urban canopy,"". Chicago Tribune. Adelmann, Jerry, and Rochelle Davis (24 April 2022). ""Green Schoolyards: A growing movement supporting health, education, and a connection with nature."". Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  12. Northeastern Illinois Planning Council, Openlands Project, and Illinois Paddling Council (30 September 1999). {{cite web | url = https://openlands.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Northeastern-Illinois-Regional-Water-Trails-Plan-1999.pdf | title = “Northeastern Illinois Regional Water Trail Plan.” City of Chicago (1999). {{cite web | url = https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/depts/dcd/supp_info/calumet_area_landuseplan.html | title = “Calumet Area Land Use Plan.” Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning (2009). {{cite web | url = https://www.cmap.illinois.gov/documents/10180/38976/greenways_exec_summ_lowres.pdf/aa4b8bc7-d172-4831-a4d7-e2468246b8b5 | title = “Northeastern Illinois Regional Greenways and Trails Plan: Map and Summary.” City of Chicago (2022). {{cite web | url = https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/sites/museum-campus-working-group/home.html | title = “Where Worlds Connect: A New Vision for Chicago’s Museum Campus”. Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  13. Chicago, Classic (1 July 2016). "Jerry Adelmann: The Natural | Classic Chicago Magazine". classicchicagomagazine.com. Retrieved 16 December 2023.
  14. Center for US-China Arts Exchange, ""Weishan City and Heritage Valley Project."". Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  15. Bross, Judy Carmack (14 October 2023). ""Jerry Adelmann: Generosity of Professional Spirit,"". Classic Chicago Magazine. Retrieved 2023-10-30. Vitali, Marc and Linda Qiu (12 May 2015). ""Art of Papercutting Opens Window into China and Chicago,"". WTTW News. Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  16. Bowman, Dale (2 June 2023). ""Openlands' Jerry Adelmann follows long journey while staying close to his roots,"". Chicago Sun-Times.
  17. Openlands (2023). ""2023 Conservation Leadership Award Recipient: Jerry Adelmann"".
  18. Crain’s Chicago Business (2023). ""2023 Crain's Chicago Business Notable Leaders in Sustainability"".. Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  19. ""GCA Medal Winners: Frances K. Hutchinson Medal,"".

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