Climate Change
Sustainability

In a race against extreme floods, some cities look to nature

Meet the architects igniting a green city revolution.
By Teodosia Dobriyanova  on 
Split screen: on the left, an image shows cars stranded by a urban flood, while the image of the left is of a thriving city with a lot of green space. Caption reads: sponge cities.
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Mashable's short documentaries feature compelling individuals, innovations, and movements from around the world.


What if bringing nature back to our gray cities could help us contain urban flooding? When architect Kongjian Yu first pitched this concept, he was celebrated in the West, but ignored in his native China. Until a devastating flood in 2012 hit Beijing and forced policymakers to give his green idea a chance. Today, the so-called sponge cities have revolutionised landscape architecture in China and serve as inspiration to some Western architects. In this Mashable Orginal, we explore the genesis of Kongjian Yu's sponge cities, some of the architects applying this model on a global scale, and how efficient sponge cities are in the face of climate change.

Picture of Teodosia

Teodosia Dobriyanova

Video Producer

Teodosia is a video producer at Mashable UK, focussing on stories about climate resilience, sustainability and social good.


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