Water

We partner with community, government and others to meet today’s resilience challenges like urban flooding, leaks, and lead pipes. The work is as much social as physical: as we help to build or rebuild infrastructure, we also seek to mitigate a history of unfair land-use decisions and neglect, often in Black and Brown communities.

We promote practical changes in how people manage water as a resource: changes that are good for residents, good for businesses, and good for the environment. Our solutions provide effective, replicable blueprints for water management and services. We also propose legislation and build alliances to promote more efficient and sustainable policies and practices.


Urban Flooding

The way we build cities makes them prone to flooding, even in modest rainstorms. Asphalt and concrete prevent rainwater from soaking into the ground, and sewer systems struggle with increasingly more severe downpours, causing urban flooding.

Learn more


RainReady®

Since 2012, we’ve developed RainReady strategies for homeowners and communities to address urban flooding.

Learn more


Great Lakes Water Infrastructure

We develop innovative solutions to improve health, equity, affordability, and efficiency across our region through our Great Lakes Water Infrastructure Project.

Learn more


Environmental Justice

How do we put into practice the mandate to center voices of those most affected by water infrastructure and other challenges? Our Civic Innovation Hub capacity-building program is one answer, providing area residents with coaching and training.

Highlighting inequities in access to clean water and flood control is another aspect of our environmental justice work. During COVID, we partnered with Little Village Environmental Justice Organization on a comparative study of water and health in Chicago’s Little Village and Lincoln Park communities. The study was updated in 2022.


Green stormwater infrastructure

Communities can achieve beautification goals while controlling urban flooding. We partner with community groups to identify flood management methods that also enhance the landscape, through our Nature Near Transit work.


Data Analysis

We develop tools to help planners, homeowners and others understand and document the value of green infrastructure to address flooding and water infrastructure.

  • The Green Values Calculator compares the performance, costs, and benefits of green infrastructure to conventional stormwater practices.
  • The Urban Flooding Baseline Tool documents where floods are most likely to occur across 40 communities on Chicago’s South Side and southern suburbs, using maps, user photos, and multiple data sources to highlight the issue from several perspectives.

In addition to tools, we conduct research such as the Green Values Strategy Guide: Linking Green Infrastructure Benefits to Community Priorities, produced in 2020, which highlights quantifiable benefits of green stormwater infrastructure.