Shanghai Daily

New green initiative­s to spur ‘a city in the parks’

- Hu Min

SHANGHAI will build 120 new parks and its greenways will extend another 200 kilometers in 2024, marking another significan­t step towards its goal of being “a city in the parks.”

Local authoritie­s unveiled the city’s annual greenery blueprint yesterday.

On the list are 120 new parks, among which 70 will be newly built or renovated pocket parks, another 1,000 hectares of green land, and extra vertical greenery totaling 400,000 square meters.

“In 2024, authoritie­s will accelerate the developmen­t of ‘a city in the parks’ to fuel the constructi­on of an ecological city,” said Xu Dongxin, director of the Shanghai Greenery and Public Sanitation Bureau’s greenery department.

Greenways in the city are paths for leisure and exercise amidst trees, flowers, water, and other natural resources. They include paths in gardens and forests, as well as along rivers and roads.

By the year’s end, the city will have another 200km of greenways, in addition to the 1,769km at the end of 2023.

An ecological park belt circling the city is being developed, and constructi­on of 10 parks on the belt is scheduled to start this year with another eight opening to the public, according to the bureau.

The constructi­on involving a number of major greenery projects, such as the Sanlin and Beicai green land in the Pudong New Area, will be accelerate­d.

The opening of the southern part of Shanghai Expo Culture Park in Pudong is also on the agenda.

A refined management approach to parks will be taken with an increase in facilities for children and the elderly.

The blueprint also includes the 24-hour opening of 30 parks and the expansion of park functions with a combinatio­n of sports, culture, tourism, music, art, and traditiona­l Chinese opera elements introduced to enrich the experience of visitors, officials said.

Park operators are encouraged to explore the opening of more lawn areas and the city’s camping area management demonstrat­ion spots will be promoted.

“A ‘park city,’ where residents will see flowers when they open windows, step on green land when they walk out, and smell the fragrance of flowers in all seasons, is the pursuit of Shanghai,” said Deng Jianping, director of the bureau.

A visual feast is blooming at parks across the city with flowers bursting into a kaleidosco­pe of colors, heralding that spring is not far.

Eighty parks across Shanghai have prepared 54 flower-themed activities this spring, presenting a sea of flowers, according to the bureau.

These flowers include cherry blossoms, peonies, azaleas, Chinese roses and magnolia.

At People’s Park in Huangpu District and Huangxing Park in Yangpu District, begonia exhibition­s will be held in March with activities such as string music performanc­es and handicraft experience­s to wow visitors.

Kawazu-zakura blossom, the most prevalent cherry blossom in Shanghai, will be in the peak of its time for best appreciati­on from this weekend at Chenshan Botanical Garden in suburban Songjiang District. The peak period will last between seven and 10 days based on weather conditions.

The garden boasts about 2,000 cherry blossom trees of some 80 varieties.

It has a 1.5-kilometer avenue of cherry blossom trees that looks like a pink tunnel from a dream.

 ?? ?? People take photos of plum blossoms at a park in Shanghai on February 16. — CFP
People take photos of plum blossoms at a park in Shanghai on February 16. — CFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China