The Lagoon Shelter House is a building located on the University of Iowa campus along the west bank of the Iowa River. Originally built in 1939, it gets its name from a lagoon that once sat nearby. For decades, the Lagoon Shelter House has supported outdoor recreation at the university. Recently, it transitioned from a storage facility to an adventure recreation space under the direction of Recreational Services, with a renewed focus on outdoor experiences and experiential learning.

Living Lab Features

Below are some of the special features of this living lab that offer unique teaching, learning, and research opportunities.

What do Hawkeyes say?

"The Lagoon Shelter House is an amazing space and I would love to have more activities there to spend time outside!"

For Instructors:

This living lab provides a valuable resource for instructors at the University of Iowa and beyond to enhance their educational objectives. Our team has identified specific connections to a diverse array of academic disciplines.  Instructors are encouraged to bring their students to the site to engage with these curricular linkages firsthand, fostering experiential learning. Additionally, students are invited to utilize the space for research and exploration, allowing them to deepen their understanding of the interplay between nature and their field of study.

Curricular Connections

Communications & Media

  • Develop a social media campaign promoting the Lagoon Shelter House as a recreation space for students and the local community. 

  • Use student art, film, and photography to showcase events and nature experiences. 

History

  • Investigate the history of outdoor recreation at the University of Iowa, comparing past and present uses of the Lagoon Shelter House. 

  • Examine how Indigenous communities historically used the Iowa River for transportation, sustenance, and cultural practices. 

Geography

  • Use GIS tools to analyze erosion patterns, river movement, and land use changes around the Lagoon Shelter House over time. 

  • Assess how seasonal changes impact river recreation, creating recommendations for adapting activities throughout the year. 

  • Research urban planning strategies that integrate green spaces and outdoor recreation areas into city landscapes. 

Engineering

  • Propose design improvements to enhance accessibility, safety, and sustainability for the boat launch, shelter house, and surrounding areas. 

  • Develop a winterization plan for the Lagoon Shelter House, exploring solutions extending usability. 

Art, Creative Writing, & Performance Studies

  • Create nature-inspired poetry, photojournalism, and performance art featuring the Iowa River. 

  • Create dye and paper using natural materials, exploring traditional methods through historical research. 

Environmental Science

  • Conduct water quality testing in the Iowa River to monitor pollutants and assess the impact of recreational activities on the ecosystem. 

  • Study the erosion around the boat launch and suggest control measures that could be implemented. 

  • Explore the benefits of native plant restoration in preventing erosion, supporting pollinators, and improving biodiversity. 

Public Policy

  • Research university policies on outdoor recreation funding and propose ways to secure long-term financial support for site maintenance. 

  • Study local and federal policies on river conservation, assessing how the boat launch aligns with environmental regulations. 

  • Examine the role of public-private partnerships in funding and maintaining outdoor recreation areas at universities. 

Assignment Development

Discussion Questions

  • Why are outdoor spaces like the Lagoon Shelter House important for learning, creativity, and well-being in a university setting? 

  • How can this site be used as a living lab to connect classroom content with real-world challenges related to the environment, community, and sustainability? 

  • What responsibilities do we have to maintain and protect shared outdoor spaces on campus? How can students play a role? 

Interpretive Prompts

  • Consider the balance between natural and human-made elements here. How do they coexist and how could their dynamic be improved?
  • Choose a feature of the site (the river, plants, shelter building, wildlife). What does it symbolize to you? How might others interpret it differently? 

Analysis Prompts

  • Investigate how the Lagoon Shelter House supports informal learning or unstructured time. What are the cognitive or social benefits of “doing nothing” in nature?
  • Explore how water bodies on campus (like the river) contribute to environmental education. How could this location be used to teach about watersheds, pollution, or ecological resilience?

Testimonials

USDA image of flowering spurge

"My dream is to continue improving the activity options around the facility that give students more options for being outside near the river for improved well-being. A bouldering (rock climbing) garden will be extremely popular with our adventure community and will certainly bring more students to that area for healthy activity! I’m also hopeful that through collaborations with the Office of Sustainability and the Environment we can help develop classroom areas and activities that support the Living Learning Labs and the new School of Earth, Environment, and Sustainability."

Associate Director of Adventure Recreation, David Patton

USDA image of white clover flower

“I would like to use the Lagoon Shelter House. It is in a really good location and I feel like it could be used for classes or as a casual hang out spot. I do not think that the University and students are taking advantage of how nice it is.” 

Anonymous Survey Respondent

Lagoon Shelter House Stakeholders

Click below to search a directory of caretakers, researchers, stakeholders, and people involved with Lagoon Shelter House. 

Submit Your Feedback or Questions

Events Around Campus

Farm Tour at Kroul Farms promotional image

Farm Tour at Kroul Farms

Friday, October 31, 2025 1:00pm to 2:00pm
Kroul Farms

Join the Office of Sustainability and the Environment for a guided tour of Kroul Farms, a 1,250-acre family-owned farm located just 25 minutes from campus in Mount Vernon, Iowa. Owned in part by former Iowa Hawkeye and NFL football player Matt Kroul, the farm has been in the Kroul family for over 75 years.

Discover how the farm integrates row crops like corn, soybeans, and alfalfa with timber harvesting, pasture-raised beef cattle, and a thriving Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program. You...

Environmental Engineering and Science Graduate Seminar

Friday, October 31, 2025 1:30pm to 2:20pm
Seamans Center

David Ramotowski, PhD candidate, Mattes Research Group, civil and environmental engineering, University of Iowa, will be presenting, Working Towards Keeping Toxic PCBs Out of Our Air Using Bacteria and Corn-Kernel Biochar.

Saw-whet Owl Banding promotional image

Saw-whet Owl Banding

Friday, October 31, 2025 7:00pm to 10:00pm
Iowa Raptor Project

Join us after dark for this exclusive Northern Saw-whet Owl banding event! We will begin indoors at the Raptor Center for an engaging educational program to learn more about the secretive world of owls with our education birds. Next, you will be transported to our remote owl banding station where you will help collect data, band, and release owls that we may encounter. Due to the nature of this event, space is limited. Registrants must be 18 years of age or older to participate.

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