Debbie Spillane, Martin Zoffmann
1 December 2025
Resilient urban waterfronts: Strategies for climate adaptation
How can we create more nature in our cities, while shaping resilient and sustainable communities along urban waterfronts? And can this very nature become our protection, helping to safeguard urban areas, rather than relying on more hardscapes? These are just some of the questions a compelling recent publication seeks to answer.

Download Reimagining urban waterfronts for resilience today
Throughout history, people have gathered at the water’s edge, drawn by its promise of connection and abundance. These waterfronts evolved over time to become important centres of trade, recreation, and identity. But rising seas, intense rainfall, and aging infrastructure are reshaping urban areas and their waterfronts. We now need to ask ourselves how do we learn to live with water.
The limits of traditional waterfront resilience
For decades, the response was largely defensive, with cities building higher walls, stronger barriers, and more complex systems to keep the water out. But traditional coastal adaptation strategies often fail to deliver long-term urban waterfront resilience. This is because they:
- Impact ecological health
- Reduce public spaces
- Create a line of separation between people and water
Shifting to resilient waterfront strategies and nature-based design
Today, a quiet but profound shift is underway. Around the world, a new generation of urban planners, engineers, and designers are reimagining what it means to live with water. Rather than seeing it solely as a threat, they are treating it as a catalyst for regeneration. Emerging strategies include:
- Adaptive architecture and design for flood prevention
- Nature-based resilience strategies that restore ecosystems
- Public space integration for community and biodiversity benefits
Our new publication, Reimagining Urban Waterfronts for Resilience, has been developed in partnership with BOGL, an award-winning architecture studio. Read the full guide for expert insights and practical strategies on resilient waterfront. It serves as a conversation starter, outlining three aspirations and four flexible strategies for urban waterfront resiliency.
Amager island and resilient waterfront strategies
To bring this vision to life, we turn to Copenhagen, in particular to the eastern coast of the island of Amager, as a case study. Located just south of the city centre, it is a low-lying, densely built area where urban life meets the sea along a delicate coastal edge. Using the aspirations and strategies suggested, the study explores how an area shaped by land reclamation and rich in urban, cultural, and natural assets can adapt to sea-level rise and storm surges. Amager offers a compelling lens for imagining regenerative, resilient urban waterfronts of the future.
Building urban resilience through nature-based waterfront strategies
The story of urban resilience depends ultimately on reconnecting people, infrastructure, and ecosystems, on what we build or restore, and on what we protect.
Water will always shape our cities. The question is whether we can shape our relationship with it in return. If we can, the waterfronts of the future may become living examples of how humanity and nature can once again move in rhythm.
The full publication, Reimagining Urban Waterfronts for Resilience, explores this vision in depth and invites you to join this ever-evolving conversation, to challenge us, and help us explore new perspectives.
Want to know more?
Christian Nyerup Nielsen
Global Service Line Director, Water Climate Adaptation
Neil Hugh Mclean Goring
Senior Water and Climate Expert in Integrated Design
+45 51 61 74 53
Nicholas Davine
Consultant
+45 60 36 10 51
FEATURED INSIGHTS
Science is clear. Climate change is real, it is here, and it is accelerated by human activity.
For thousands of years, humans have turned deltas, rivers, coasts, and other waterfronts into dense urban areas. But climate change and extreme weather are challenging the ways in which we interact with water. Now is the time to work with nature, not against it, according to Ramboll’s Neil Goring and Simon Kates, both experts in water infrastructure and integrated urban design.
Ramboll Water and Henning Larsen recently joined forces to explore a new paradigm where water is treated as a stakeholder within the design process. We caught up with Trine Stausgaard Munk, Head of Sustainability at Ramboll Water, to understand how this thought-provoking publication came about.