💧 Water in the City
Between concrete and glass, water still finds a way to live.
On rooftops, rain is quietly gathered instead of lost. Along buildings, green walls drink from recycled greywater. Beneath the streets, systems move water carefully — not as waste, but as something to be used again, and again, and again.
Constructed wetlands exist in corners of the city, softening what was once rigid. Aquaponics and hydroponics grow food in places where soil is scarce. Irrigation is precise, measured, intentional — every drop accounted for. Even the wider watershed is no longer ignored, but protected, understood as part of the same living system.
In the middle of all this, daily life continues. Someone fills a glass. Someone washes their hands. Someone waters a plant on a balcony.
Small actions, almost invisible — yet part of something larger.
Sustainable water in the city is not loud. It doesn’t demand attention. It simply works, quietly reshaping how we live, until care becomes natural. 🌆












