rain gardens

Top Tweets
wind turbines lined up in a green field
Palm trees bending in the wind
Coal power plant with emissions rising from towers
Liquid Natural Gas tanker
dc street
Omri D. Cohen/Unsplash

Rain gardens are on the rise in cities, and for good reason

The city’s sewer system, which combines storm runoff and raw sewage in some areas, has a history of overflowing. Instead of flowing into a treatment plant, that toxic mix, along with the sediment, trash and other pollutants storm water washes off streets, ends up in rivers.

rainways rain gardens stormwater

How rainways could restore ‘Raincouver’

For cities that buried their creeks, an urban solution to remove pollutants from rainy roads.
Rain gardens climate solution
Seattle Parks and Recreation/Flickr/Commercial use & mods allowedhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/

Rain gardens are a concrete solution

Small but mighty, these mini ecosystems can help cities mitigate heavy rainfall and polluting runoff, savings streams and creeks.
nature-based urban water management

If you don’t already live in a sponge city, you will soon

Less pavement and more green spaces help absorb water instead of funneling it all away—a win-win for people and urban ecosystems.
The impossible battle to flood-proof New York City

The impossible battle to flood-proof New York City

To manage the rising risk of extreme rainfall, the Big Apple will need to get spongier. Here’s how creating more green infrastructure could keep the city high and dry. 
thirsty cities confront drier futures

As populations grow, how will thirsty cities survive their drier futures?

Water-sensitive urban design (WSUD), a holistic sustainable approach to water management, could give the world’s cities a viable means of dealing with the climatic shocks ahead. Cape Town and Singapore point the way.
ORIGINAL REPORTING
MOST POPULAR
CLIMATE