The Three-Point Sponge Policy approach for integrating Blue-Green-Grey Infrastructure by Design: Lessons from the 2021 Extreme Flood in Zhengzhou, China
Mila Avellar Montezuma , Chris Zevenbergen , Frans van de Ven , Zihang Ding , William Veerbeek , Gerald Corzo Perez , Junguo Liu
Urban Lifeline ›› 2026, Vol. 4 ›› Issue (1) : 2
The Three-Point Sponge Policy approach for integrating Blue-Green-Grey Infrastructure by Design: Lessons from the 2021 Extreme Flood in Zhengzhou, China
The increasing frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, coupled with rapid urbanization, are placing unprecedented pressure on urban environments. The Three-Point Sponge Policy Approach (3PSPa) integrates the Three-Point Approach (3PA) with Sponge City principles to enhance urban flood resilience through design-driven, adaptive, and multifunctional solutions. This paper applies the 3PSPa framework to Zhengzhou, China, which experienced devastating flooding in 2021, to assess its current flood resilience measures and explore pathways for improvement. Two contrasting urban districts in Zhengzhou were analysed: B1, a newly developed, low-density district offering high potential for implementing large-scale blue-green-grey infrastructure (BGGI); and B2, a dense, older district where interventions are limited, typically emerging incrementally through targeted retrofitting associated with urban renewal activities. By applying the 3PSPa’s five-step design process, this study identifies resilience gaps and proposes tailored interventions, balancing short-term, localized strategies with long-term, catchment-wide transformations. It emphasizes the importance of shifting from a conveyance-based water management approach to a diversified strategy that integrates infrastructure with natural hydrological processes.
Extreme weather events / Green infrastructure / Nature-based solutions / Sponge Cities / Three-Point Approach / Urban flood resilience / Research-by-design
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