The word "rejuvenation" of Fuxing Island comes from 1930, when Japanese invaders occupied Shanghai and designated the sports venue built by Shanghai Zhangpu Bureau as a restricted area. It was renamed Dinghai Island. The island was renamed Fuxing Island in 1938, and in 1940 Fuxing Island was returned to the Sapporo Bureau, and a "Fuxing Island Reclaim Monument" was built in the garden (the original was destroyed and now a replica is seen in the park), and in 1951 it was renamed the park. Fuxing Island Park is close to the port industrial area. It takes about ten minutes from the subway to the park entrance. There are many old warehouses on both sides. The mottled walls and rusted gates are occupied by vines. The own masterpieces hanging on the cozy, green, red, pink, Gradient color... colorful leaves each side of the wind. Green seedlings emerge from the cement piers of bare steel. Breakdown and vitality are compatible here, spring, summer, autumn and winter are blurred here, only leaving harmony. The main entrance of the park is a small Japanese-style gate, and the other side doors are small iron gates. From it, there is a feeling of sneaking into the abandoned venue as a child. The edge of the park retains a Japanese-style garden and is now a dangerous goods laboratory, which is forbidden for visitors. The garden is planted with evergreen trees, the trunks of the trees, the thick green leaves, and the warm sun in the early winter, if not a few red maples, as if they were in the depths of summer green.