 
          
            4
          
        
        
          Business View Magazine
        
        
          underutilized,” she begins. “Our creek has a very sce-
        
        
          nic name. It’s the Boneyard Creek.” Boneyard Creek
        
        
          is a 3.3-mile-long waterway that drains much of twin
        
        
          cities of Champaign and Urbana. It is a tributary of the
        
        
          Saline Branch of the Salt Fork Vermilion River, which,
        
        
          itself, is a tributary of the south-flowing Vermilion River
        
        
          and the Wabash River. There are conflicting stories of
        
        
          how the creek got its name, none of which have ever
        
        
          been confirmed. But in University of Illinois lore, the
        
        
          name “Boneyard” comes from the remains of poor stu-
        
        
          dents who couldn’t hack it in the school’s tough engi-
        
        
          neering curriculum.
        
        
          Tyler says that the city invested redevelopment funds
        
        
          into a key stretch of Boneyard Creek to make it a park.
        
        
          “We pulled back the banks; we added public art el-
        
        
          ements that resonated with the local ecology of the
        
        
          creek. We made use of an historic railroad trestle
        
        
          bridge that is now a pedestrian bridge. It’s a beautiful
        
        
          place,” she says, emphatically.
        
        
          And now that the creek park has been made more us-
        
        
          able and attractive, economic development has fol-
        
        
          lowed. “What we’ve seen since we opened it is invest-
        
        
          ment for the commercial buildings alongside the new
        
        
          park,” she observes. “We have very nice restaurants
        
        
          along the banks with expanded decks overlooking the
        
        
          creek. There are plans for a brewery downtown, and
        
        
          we have another project that will be a market for mul-
        
        
          tiple users.”
        
        
          The park is now also used for community events. “We
        
        
          have these great festivals,” Tyler says. “A few weeks
        
        
          back we had our Boneyard Arts Festival and we held
        
        
          a celebration at our new park with music and food
        
        
          trucks.” The yearly Boneyard Arts Festival is a county-
        
        
          wide celebration that takes place over four days in over
        
        
          90 different venues across Champaign County, and
        
        
          features the work of hundreds of fine and performing
        
        
          artists. Sculptors, weavers, painters, photographers,
        
        
          and other visual artists join musicians, actors, danc-