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sponge city

The “sponge city” concept represents a good example of improving urban water supplies on a large scale, based largely on the application of green infrastructure approaches in urban landscapes, primarily to improve water availability.

The “sponge city” concept represents a good example of improving urban water supplies on a large scale, based largely on the application of green infrastructure approaches in urban landscapes, primarily to improve water availability. Sponge cities address a problem that urban planners have long struggled with: preventing rainwater from flooding cities while implementing ways to conserve it for eventual reuse, rather than simply sending it down the drain. The application of nature-based solutions, such as green roofs, permeable pavements and bioremediation, together with the restoration of urban and peri-urban wetlands and rivers, seek to mitigate the negative impacts of urbanization on natural ecosystems. In other words, it is an urban model capable of dealing with phenomena such as floods, monsoons, flooding, or other aquatic manifestations, through drainage systems or flood zones that prevent the accumulation of water on an impermeable pavement. Sponge cities were proposed by architect Kongjian Yu in 2000, tested during that decade and exported shortly after to the entire planet, although some cities were pioneers when it came to installing analogous systems.

N.A.

Estimated value:

Use of runoff water, reduction of floods.

Expected environmental impact:

Rural

Sector:

70 - 90

Efficiency (%):

N.A.

Energy used:

500 - 1000

Precipitation (mm):

2, 3, 6, 11 and 13

SDGs impacted:

Production and storage of water and Efficiency in water use

Main theme:

500 - 1000

Precipitation:

Asian

Region:

high

Application difficulty:

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