Water Systems That Perform: Integrating Urban Wetlands and Smart Metering for Climate-Resilient Cities

By Robert C. Brears · February 10, 2026

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Water droplet illustrating high-performance urban water systems integrating ecological treatment and digital demand management.

Welcome to this week’s edition of the “Our Future Water” newsletter.

Urban systems face rising pressure from densification, climate stress, and constrained infrastructure capacity, demanding approaches that perform multiple functions at once. This edition explores how cities can strengthen water resilience by treating both nature-based systems and digital tools as core infrastructure and governance assets. The common thread is system performance: aligning ecological processes and user behavior with urban water objectives to manage risk, improve efficiency, and support long-term sustainability.

Insights

Urban Wetlands as Treatment Infrastructure

Urban wetlands are deliberately designed or restored landscapes that function as integral components of the urban water system rather than passive green space. They receive stormwater runoff and use physical and biological processes to manage water quality and volume. Through mechanisms such as sedimentation, filtration by vegetation, nutrient uptake, and controlled retention, wetlands reduce pollutant loads and moderate flow variability before water reaches downstream waterways or treatment assets.

Beyond their core treatment role, urban wetlands generate co-benefits across biodiversity, climate regulation, and public health domains. Habitat creation supports urban ecological networks, while evapotranspiration and shading contribute to local temperature regulation. These functions strengthen urban resilience by reducing exposure to flooding, improving environmental quality, and supporting social well-being, all of which underpin long-term sustainability in dense urban settings.

An illustrative example is Melbourne’s Mill Park Wetlands in The Lakes Reserve. The project involves upgrading constructed wetlands through reshaping basins, improving hydraulic structures, and extensive revegetation to restore treatment performance. The outcomes include improved stormwater filtration, reduced pollutant transfer to connected waterways, and enhanced ecological and recreational value. Read the full article by Robert C. Brears to understand how constructed wetlands are planned, upgraded, and governed as operational water infrastructure within metropolitan systems.

Advanced Metering Infrastructure as Demand Governance

Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) is a socio-technical system that combines digital meters, data transmission, and user interfaces to manage water demand as an operational element of the urban water system. AMI enables frequent measurement of consumption and near real-time feedback to utilities and users. Through mechanisms such as distributed monitoring, behavioral feedback, and automated alerts, it supports demand reduction, leak detection, and peak load management.

The co-benefits of AMI extend into energy efficiency, financial resilience, and social sustainability. Lower water demand reduces energy use for treatment and distribution, while deferred capital investment eases fiscal pressure on utilities. From a resilience perspective, demand governance improves system adaptability during supply stress and supports equitable access by making consumption patterns visible and manageable over the long term.

Denver Water provides an illustrative case through its deployment of AMI linked to the EyeOnWater platform. The system allows customers to track usage patterns, receive alerts for abnormal consumption, and adjust behaviors such as irrigation scheduling. The outcomes include reduced water waste, earlier identification of leaks, and improved alignment between user behavior and system capacity. Read the full article by Robert C. Brears to see how digital metering reshapes the relationship between utilities and users to deliver sustained demand management outcomes.

Key Takeaways

When constructed urban wetlands and advanced metering infrastructure are treated as core system assets, cities can align physical processes and user behavior through integrated planning and governance. This approach improves overall system performance by managing water quality, quantity, and demand together, strengthening urban resilience while advancing sustainability outcomes across environmental, social, and operational domains.


Circular Economy and Liveable Cities (Cambridge University Press)

The Circular Economy and Liveable Cities, edited by Robert C. Brears, Our Future Water, has been published. This essential guide delivers actionable strategies and best practices for implementing circular economy, climate resilience, and sustainability in urban environments, with global examples from leading cities like Tokyo, New York, and Singapore to help planners, policymakers, and researchers build liveable and sustainable cities for the future.


2nd Edition of Nature-Based Solutions to 21st Century Challenges (Routledge)

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Nature-based water systems illustrating ecological infrastructure and demand management for urban water security.
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