The man turning cities into giant sponges to embrace floods
Yu Kongjian can remember the day he nearly died in the river.
Swollen with rain, the White Sand Creek had flooded the rice terraces in Yu's farming commune in China. Yu, just 10 then, ran excitedly to the river's edge.
Suddenly, the earth beneath his feet collapsed, sweeping him into the floodwaters in one terrifying instant. But banks of willows and reeds slowed the river's flow, allowing Yu to grab the vegetation and pull himself out.
"I am sure that if the river was like it is today, smoothened with concrete flood walls, I would have drowned," he tells the BBC.
It was a defining moment that would impact not only his life, but the rest of China as well.
One of China's most prominent urban design thinkers and Dean of the prestigious Peking University's college of architecture and landscape, Yu Kongjian is the man behind the sponge city concept of managing floods that is being rolled out in scores of Chinese cities.
It is an idea he believes other places can adopt - even as some raise questions of whether, in the face of more extreme floods linked to climate change, sponge cities can truly work.
'Don't fight the water'
What if a flood could be something we embrace rather than fear? This is the central idea of Prof Yu's sponge city.
Conventional flood water management often involves building pipes or drains to carry away water as swiftly as possible, or reinforcing river banks with concrete to ensure they do not overflow.
But a sponge city does the opposite, seeking instead to soak up rainfall and slow down surface run-off.
It tries to do it in three areas. The first is at the source, where just like a sponge with many holes, a city tries to contain water with many ponds.
The second is through the flow, where instead of trying to channel water away quickly in straight lines, meandering rivers with vegetation or wetlands slow water down - just like in the creek that saved his life.
This has the added benefit of creating green spaces, parks and animal habitats, and purifying the surface run-off with plants removing polluting toxins and nutrients.
The third is the sink, where the water empties out to a river, lake or sea. Prof Yu advocates relinquishing this land and avoiding construction in low-lying areas. "You cannot fight the water, you have to let it go," he says.
While similar concepts exist elsewhere, the sponge city is notable for using natural processes to solve the city's problems, says sustainable design expert Dr Nirmal Kishnani of the National University of Singapore.
"Right now we have a disconnect... but the thinking is that we have to find our way back to seeing ourselves as a part of nature."
Much of the concept is influenced by ancient farming techniques Prof Yu learnt growing up in the eastern coastal province of Zhejiang, such as storing rainwater in ponds for crops. It has won Prof Yu and his landscaping firm Turenscape many awards.
"Nobody would drown, not even in the monsoon season. We just lived with the water. We adapted to the water when the floods came," he says.
He left for Beijing aged 17 where he studied landscaping, and later studied design at Harvard.
When he returned to his homeland in 1997, China was deep in the throes of the construction frenzy we still see today.
Appalled by its "grey, lifeless infrastructure", Prof Yu began advocating an urban design philosophy based on traditional Chinese concepts.
Besides sponge cities, for instance, he calls for natural rustic landscaping or a "big feet revolution", in opposition to overly manicured parks which he likens to the outdated Chinese practice of binding women's feet.