Rural Abundance & Vitality: The Chaobai River Basin
Honor Award
Analysis and Planning
Tianjin Municipality, Tianjin, China
Sasaki
Client: Tianjin Municipal Bureau of Planning and Natural Resources
An ambitious plan that successfully weaves together cultural, ecological and economic revitalization solutions to reinvigorate a region in sore need of all three.
- 2025 Awards Jury
Project Credits
Leo’s Planners & Architects, Local Planning and Design Firm
Project Statement
The Chaobai River Basin, a historically vibrant agrarian landscape, faced ecological, cultural, and economic fragmentation after 20th-century channelization disrupted its human-river symbiosis. This rural regeneration initiative integrates ecological restoration, cultural reanimation, and economic revitalization into a cohesive framework. Collaborating with 28 partner villages, the plan restores riparian habitats, revives cultural traditions, and transitions monoculture farming to diverse agroecological systems. By reconnecting communities to their riverine heritage, the basin emerges as a resilient landscape where ecological health, cultural pride, and sustainable livelihoods thrive—exemplifying a model of rural abundance and vitality.
Project Narrative
For centuries, the 28 villages of the Chaobai River Basin thrived through adaptive coexistence with seasonal flooding, rice cultivation, and water-based cultural practices. 20th-century channelization, however, imposed rigid concrete embankments that fragmented communities and eroded ecological-cultural connections. In response, an initiative to return the basin to an era of abundance and vitality launched a three-pronged regeneration process.
The first tenet includes a comprehensive ecological restoration strategy to transform fragmented infrastructure into resilient, biodiverse corridors that harmonize human and natural systems. Riverbanks are redesigned as adaptive typologies—from low-impact conservation zones to interactive community spaces. These interventions enhance habitat diversity, create migratory bird corridors along the East Asian-Australasian Flyway, and integrate seasonal floodplains as multifunctional spaces. 600km of underutilized irrigation canals are retrofitted into vibrant eco-corridors, blending constructed wetlands and native vegetation to filter agricultural runoff and replenish groundwater. Agroecological practices, including rice-fish symbiosis and crab co-cultivation replace monocultures, fostering soil health and sustainable yields.
The second tenet establishes a vibrant waterfront cultural district with public spaces that celebrate riverside life, reinterprets local heritage through contemporary design, and launches agricultural-art programs rooted in regional traditions. Interactive exhibits celebrate the basin’s shipbuilding legacy; an annual Water Harvest Festival reanimates ancient rituals like floating markets to blend intangible heritage with contemporary activities; and outdoor classrooms reinterpret ancestral farming wisdom while fostering pride in local identity.
The third tenet is an economic revitalization framework that guides upgrades to agricultural systems and promotes coordinated, differentiated development across the region. Upstream areas focus on wellness and agro-tourism; midstream areas include a waterfront living room and agriculture park; and downstream areas focus on low-carbon farming pilot projects. Breaking free from the constraints of single‑crop farming, the project champions a diversified agroecological model that integrates low‑carbon agriculture, value‑added processing, and immersive eco‑tourism. This includes 2,500 hectares of rice paddies integrated with crab co-cultivation; 2,000 hectares of persimmon orchards combined with fishponds to optimize resource cycles; and a 1,200-hectare demonstration area that merges lotus cultivation and immersive tourism to create a flagship hub for sustainable initiatives. These measures stimulate youth‐led enterprises and forge pathways to livelihood for the next generation of farmers.
Critical to this transformation was a 16-month participatory process. Over 28 villages actively contributed proposals aligned with their development priorities, while cross-sector partnerships with 5 key government agencies ensured policy alignment and resource coordination. This platform enabled large-scale, collaborative long-term planning—a rare achievement in rural revitalization efforts. The Chaobai River Basin’s renewal exemplifies how ecological stewardship, cultural reinterpretation, and economic innovation intertwine to create landscapes of abundance where the river is no longer a boundary but a thread weaving vitality into the fabric of rural life.