# The Menger Sponge: Zero Volume, Infinite Surface

> A cube riddled with holes until nothing remains — yet its surface never stops growing. Inside the paradox that convinced mathematicians to rethink dimension itself.

*Published 2026-06-25 · Updated 2026-06-25 · By Dr. Elena Marchetti*

## What Is the Menger Sponge?

Take a cube. Divide it into a 3×3×3 grid of 27 identical smaller cubes — think of a Rubik's cube sliced into thirds along every axis. Now remove the cube at the center of the whole structure, plus the cube at the center of each of the six faces. That leaves **20** of the original 27 cubes. Then repeat the process on each of those 20 cubes, drilling out their centers and face-centers. Repeat forever.

What remains is the **Menger sponge** — a geometric object that manages to be simultaneously vast and empty: its surface area grows without bound while its volume shrinks toward exactly zero. It is, to borrow the physicist's instinct, more hole than substance.

The sponge was introduced by [Karl Menger](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Menger) in his 1926 paper *Allgemeine Räume und Cartesische Räume*, published in the *Proceedings of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences*. Menger, then a 24-year-old Austrian mathematician, was not trying to make art. He was trying to answer a surprisingly difficult question: *what, rigorously, is dimension?* The sponge was his answer — a universal curve that contains a topological copy of every compact one-dimensional space that can exist. The fractal beauty was, in a sense, a side effect of the logic.

  Key Takeaway: The Menger sponge is a three-dimensional fractal with a Hausdorff dimension of log(20)/log(3) ≈ 2.727, a topological dimension of 1, zero volume, and infinite surface area. Every face of the sponge is a Sierpiński carpet. Every diagonal cross-section is a Cantor set. It is, in the precise mathematical sense, a universal curve.

## How Do You Build a Menger Sponge, Step by Step?

The construction is an **iterated function system (IFS)** — a process of repeatedly applying a fixed rule to every piece that remains. Each stage is called a *level*.

  Menger Sponge Construction: Cubes, Volume, and Surface Area by Iteration Level

      Level (n)
      Number of small cubes
      Side length of each cube
      Volume (fraction of original)
      Surface area (relative to original)

    01116
    1201/3(20/27)1 ≈ 0.7418 (↑ 33%)
    24001/9(20/27)2 ≈ 0.54932/3 (↑ 78% over level 0)
    38,0001/27(20/27)3 ≈ 0.407grows further
    ∞∞→ 00∞

At each level *n*, there are **20n** cubes, each with side length **(1/3)n**. The volume at level *n* is therefore **(20/27)n**. Because 20/27  1, the first term diverges to infinity. The surface area grows without limit — a result that sits uncomfortably alongside the vanishing volume, yet is exact and provable.

Practically, level-3 sponges are the ones humans build. The MegaMenger project in 2014 — organized by mathematician Matt Parker of Queen Mary University of London and Laura Taalman of James Madison University, sponsored by the [National Museum of Mathematics (MoMath)](https://momath.org/) in New York — coordinated 20 sites worldwide to each assemble a level-3 sponge from roughly 48,000 folded business cards, together constituting a virtual level-4 sponge: the largest distributed fractal model ever built.

## What Is the Fractal Dimension of the Menger Sponge?

This is where the sponge becomes philosophically rich. In ordinary geometry, dimension is an integer: lines are one-dimensional, planes are two-dimensional, solids are three-dimensional. But the Menger sponge refuses to fit neatly into any of those categories.

The **Hausdorff dimension** — the rigorous measure of how efficiently an object fills space as you zoom in — is calculated from the self-similarity relationship. At each iteration the sponge consists of 20 self-similar copies of itself, each scaled down by a factor of 3. This gives:

**D = log(20) / log(3) ≈ 2.727**

That is: more complex than any 2-dimensional surface (which would have D = 2) but less complete than a solid 3-dimensional object (D = 3). The sponge lives in a fractional dimension between surface and solid — a ghost of geometry that the classical toolkit of Euclid cannot name.

Yet the sponge's *topological* dimension is **1** — the dimension of a curve. Despite its three-dimensional scaffolding and its near-three-dimensional Hausdorff measure, the sponge is, in the deepest topological sense, a curve. This is Menger's original result: the sponge is a *universal curve*, meaning every compact one-dimensional space — every tree, every graph, every fractal curve — can be embedded inside it as a subset. In that sense it is a library, in three dimensions, of all possible curves. For a complete treatment of fractal dimension, see the companion article [Fractal Dimension Explained](https://fractal.us/mathematics/fractal-dimension).

## How Does the Menger Sponge Relate to the Sierpiński Carpet and Cantor Set?

These three fractals form a natural family, each living in one more dimension than the last, each generated by the same conceptual move: carve out the middle, repeat.

  - **[Cantor set](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantor_set) (1D):** Start with a line segment. Remove the middle third. Remove the middle third of each remaining piece. Repeat. The result is a set of infinitely many points with total length zero — the one-dimensional ancestor of the family.

  - **[Sierpiński carpet](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sierpi%C5%84ski_carpet) (2D):** Start with a square. Divide into 9 sub-squares. Remove the center. Repeat on the 8 remaining squares. Every flat face of the Menger sponge — slice it with any plane parallel to a face — is a Sierpiński carpet. The carpet has Hausdorff dimension log(8)/log(3) ≈ 1.893.

  - **Menger sponge (3D):** Extend the same logic into the third dimension. Any diagonal cross-section — cut the sponge with a plane through the center and a corner — yields a Cantor set. The sponge is thus a geometric bridge between its lower-dimensional relatives.

The relationship is more than visual. All three are members of the same category of *lacunary fractals* — objects defined by what has been removed rather than what remains. And all three serve as models for **porous media** in applied science: rocks, soils, and biological tissues where the geometry of the empty space controls how fluid moves through the solid.

## What Are the Real-World Applications of the Menger Sponge?

Abstract as it appears, the Menger sponge has practical scientific utility. Its key feature — a hierarchically structured pore network with self-similar geometry across scales — mirrors structures that occur throughout nature and engineering.

### Geology and Reservoir Rock Modeling

Oil and gas reservoir rocks, aquifers, and soil systems all have complex pore networks that control how fluids flow through them. Research published in the [OSTI geoscience literature](https://www.osti.gov/biblio/6883693) demonstrated that the Menger sponge serves as a useful fractal model for these rock/pore systems: the sponge's self-similar pore structure captures the hierarchical scaling of real pore networks. The **fractal dimension of the pore system** — measurable from thin-section microscopy or X-ray tomography — directly informs predictions of permeability, capillary pressure, and hydraulic conductivity. This matters for subsurface hydrology, carbon sequestration, and petroleum engineering.

### Catalysis and High-Surface-Area Materials

The defining property of infinite surface area in a finite volume is exactly what chemical engineers want from a catalyst support or an adsorbent material. Hierarchically porous structures inspired by Menger-sponge geometry — synthesized at nanometer scales — provide the enormous surface area needed for gas adsorption, heterogeneous catalysis, and energy storage. Research into **LiOH adsorbents** for CO₂ capture has explicitly modeled pore topology using the Sierpiński-Menger sponge fractal to understand gas flow behavior.

### Seismology and Fracture Networks

Fracture networks in the Earth's crust — the pathways along which seismic energy propagates and groundwater migrates — exhibit self-similar scaling across many orders of magnitude. The Menger sponge provides a compact mathematical description of this scaling, enabling geophysicists to characterize fracture density, connectivity, and fluid-transport potential from limited data.

### Architecture and Structural Design

Structural engineers and computational architects have drawn on the Menger sponge's geometry to design lightweight load-bearing structures: a frame-like hierarchy of material that maximizes structural surface while minimizing mass. 3D-printed lattice structures for aerospace and biomedical implants increasingly resemble Menger-sponge topologies, precisely because the self-similar hierarchy distributes stress efficiently without excess material.

## How Is the Menger Sponge Related to Other Famous Fractals?

The Menger sponge occupies an important position in the atlas of named fractals, bridging the purely 2-D world of classical fractals and the full 3-D volumetric fractals like the [Mandelbulb](https://fractal.us/famous-fractals/3d-fractals-mandelbulb).

Its closest relatives in the famous-fractals family are:

  - **[Sierpiński triangle](https://fractal.us/famous-fractals/sierpinski-triangle):** The 2-D analog. A triangle repeatedly subdivided with its center removed; Hausdorff dimension log(3)/log(2) ≈ 1.585. The Menger sponge is the three-dimensional generalization of the same construction applied to a square (the Sierpiński carpet), which is itself the 2-D version of the sponge.

  - **[Koch snowflake](https://fractal.us/famous-fractals/koch-snowflake):** Another fractal with infinite perimeter and finite area, demonstrating the same paradox in two dimensions that the Menger sponge demonstrates in three: a boundary measure and an interior measure that diverge in opposite directions.

  - **[Mandelbrot set](https://fractal.us/famous-fractals/mandelbrot-set):** The most famous fractal has a boundary with Hausdorff dimension 2.0 — the maximum possible for a curve. The Menger sponge's dimension of 2.727 lies above any curve but below any solid, making it a useful comparison point for calibrating intuitions about fractal dimension.

Unlike the Mandelbrot set, which is defined by iteration of a complex-number formula, the Menger sponge is a *geometric IFS fractal* — defined by a simple spatial rule rather than algebraic iteration. This makes it more tangible and constructible, which is why Menger sponges are a staple of mathematics outreach: they can be folded from paper, printed on 3D printers, or carved from foam.

## Why Does the Menger Sponge Have Zero Volume But Infinite Surface Area?

This is the question that stops most newcomers cold, because it seems to violate common sense. If there is a surface, surely there must be something behind it. If there is nothing behind it, how can there be a surface?

The resolution comes from taking limits seriously. At every *finite* level of construction, the sponge has both nonzero volume and finite surface area — it is a perfectly ordinary porous solid. The paradox only emerges in the limit as the construction is taken to *infinity*. At that point:

  - Volume converges to zero: the remaining solid has been so thoroughly perforated that no finite ball of positive radius fits entirely inside it. Formally, the sponge has **Lebesgue measure zero** in three dimensions.

  - Surface area diverges to infinity: each new round of perforation adds a new layer of internal faces, and the total count of newly created faces grows faster than the total size of the sponge shrinks. The ratio of surface to volume does not stabilize — it explodes.

An important subtlety: because the final sponge has zero volume, it has no proper 3-dimensional interior. The "surface area" in the classical sense applies to *finite approximations*; for the infinite limit, it is more precise to speak of the sponge's 2-dimensional Hausdorff measure as infinite, and its 3-dimensional Hausdorff measure as zero. The fractal dimension of ≈ 2.727 sits exactly between these two, signaling that the sponge is too complex for 2-D measure to capture it (it gets zero) but too sparse for 3-D measure (also zero) — it lives in a genuinely fractional dimension.

For a grounded mathematical walkthrough of this calculation, [John D. Cook's blog post on the surface area and volume of the Menger sponge](https://www.johndcook.com/blog/2019/05/05/area-volume-menger-sponge/) is an exemplary resource.

## Sources

1. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menger_sponge](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menger_sponge)
2. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Menger](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Menger)
3. [https://mathworld.wolfram.com/MengerSponge.html](https://mathworld.wolfram.com/MengerSponge.html)
4. [https://www.johndcook.com/blog/2019/05/05/area-volume-menger-sponge/](https://www.johndcook.com/blog/2019/05/05/area-volume-menger-sponge/)
5. [https://blogs.mathworks.com/cleve/2021/12/06/the-menger-sponge-fractal/](https://blogs.mathworks.com/cleve/2021/12/06/the-menger-sponge-fractal/)
6. [https://megamenger.katiesteckles.co.uk/](https://megamenger.katiesteckles.co.uk/)
7. [https://openlearning.mit.edu/news/mega-menger-building-menger-sponge-mit](https://openlearning.mit.edu/news/mega-menger-building-menger-sponge-mit)
8. [https://perimeterinstitute.ca/megamenger-project](https://perimeterinstitute.ca/megamenger-project)
9. [https://www.osti.gov/biblio/6883693](https://www.osti.gov/biblio/6883693)
10. [https://arxiv.org/pdf/1112.2850](https://arxiv.org/pdf/1112.2850)
11. [https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/978-3-031-46700-4_5.pdf](https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/978-3-031-46700-4_5.pdf)
12. [https://www.mathscareers.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Menger_Sponge_Maths_Inside.pdf](https://www.mathscareers.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Menger_Sponge_Maths_Inside.pdf)
13. [https://medium.com/science-spectrum/the-paradox-of-the-amazing-menger-sponge-575da0073a47](https://medium.com/science-spectrum/the-paradox-of-the-amazing-menger-sponge-575da0073a47)

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Source: https://fractal.us/famous-fractals/menger-sponge
Index: https://fractal.us/llms.txt · Full text: https://fractal.us/llms-full.txt
