There is no doubt that this year’s Cityscape Dubai was big. For the first time in its seven-year history the event was open for four days and drew a record-breaking crowd of 70,000 people from over 150 countries. Despite the numbers, however, there was a palpable sense that many visitors were there to see the sights rather than to buy. Perhaps the presence of the nascent Real Estate Regulatory Agency (RERA) and its ban on selling in the venue kept the frenzy of previous years at bay.
On offer
There were fewer launches than expected and most of them consisted of luxury residential developments. It would have been refreshing to see launches in other categories, yet many developers were able to wow the crowds with their unique master-planned communities across the MENA from Morocco to Egypt and from Syria to Iraq. The only real investment announcement of the show came from the Dubai International Financial Center when it announced an $816 million investment in the Dubai Pearl. The project is a mixed-use development worth some $4 billion, located near the base of the Palm Jumeirah and, like almost everything else, “currently under construction”.
Perhaps the most spectacular unveiling of the show was the $95 billion Jumeirah Gardens, announced by the newly formed Meraas Development. Several unique buildings will be featured within the project, including one comprised of three towers at least 600 meters high and interconnected with bridges or skywalks, the latter to house restaurants and apartments with the feel of being suspended in mid-air. The building, to be called Dubai 1, will be clad in a mosaic-like glass and aluminum exterior. The same company also announced the Park Gate complex that will be composed of multiple pairs of 30-to-40-floor buildings unified at the top with an arching, plant-covered grid structure. The intention is to keep the area up to 10 degrees cooler than its surrounding environment.
Other breathtaking projects included the Nakheel Harbor and Tower, which consists of an inland harbor at the foot of what is set to be the world’s tallest tower, stretching over one kilometer into the sky. The tower will be comprised of four independent buildings linked together and its structural layout is heavily influenced by Islamic design. The harbor will be flanked by warehouses and parking facilities for 4,000 cars, intended to service Nakheel’s The World development just off Nakheel Harbor’s coast.