was built using
green track, which reduces surface run-off and provides other environmental benefits. The Sponge City philosophy is to distribute and retain water at its source, slow down water as it flows away from its source, clean water naturally, and adapt to water at the sink when water accumulates. This is in stark contrast to the conventional solution of grey infrastructure, which is to centralize and accumulate water using big reservoirs, speed up the flow by pipes and channelized drains, and fight against water at the end by higher and stronger flood walls and dams. The theory of Sponge City emphasizes the basic principles of 'based on nature', 'source control', 'local adaption', protecting nature, learning from nature, preserving urban ecological space as much as possible, restoring biodiversity, and creating a beautiful landscape environment. All of this can be realized by achieving natural absorption, natural infiltration, and natural purification. These principles come from long-standing wisdom and strategies practiced across China for thousands of years, when water had to be worked with and around instead of combatted with gray infrastructure. There are three main facets to developing such systems: protecting the original urban ecosystem,
ecological restoration, and low-impact development. •
Protection focuses on the city's original ecologically sensitive areas, such as rivers, lakes, and ditches. Natural vegetation, soil, and microorganisms are used to gradually treat the aquatic environment and restore the damaged urban ecosystem. •
Restoration measures include identifying ecological patches, constructing
ecological corridors, strengthening the connections between the patches, forming a network, and delineating the blue and green lines to restore the aquatic ecological environment. • Mandatory measures apply to urban roads, urban green spaces, urban water systems, residential areas, and specific buildings to protect ecological patches, maintain their storage capacity, strengthen source control, and form ecological sponges of different scales. With these design principles in mind, they can be applied at three different levels/scales: •
Macro-scale: regional or watershed level for regional master plans •
Meso Scale: planning at city, township, village level •
Micro scale: individual "sponge units" within meso scale. Examples include parks and neighborhoods Sponge city policies have been more frequently implemented in new construction than in retrofitted developments from the past few decades of rapid urbanization. Xiamen's Yangfang residential area and Shanghai's Langang Park are two new developments indicative of this trend.
Shougang park, the former site of a steel mill which was redeveloped into a park which includes the 2022 Winter Olympics venue
Big Air Shougang, incorporates sponge city design concepts. == Political applications ==