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AmP Countdown: Time left until the XXIII World Youth Day in Sydney, Australia : 2008-07-15 12:00:00 GMT-05:00


Saturday, February 16, 2008

Picture/Report: Dubai to build world's largest arch bridge by 2012

It's an example that there's truth in the saying: "the internet gods are fickle."

This summer, on a slow news day, I put together a little post titled "Proof that Dubai has more money that it can spend" and in it explained some of the incredible construction projects that the U.A.E. has undertaken there.

For whatever reason, that post is one of the most popular ones I have ever written, no doubt aided by favorable google image search rankings. So, what they heck, here's another post in the same vein.

"Dubai to build world's largest arch bridge by 2012" (click image above for full-size version):

If any real city on our planet can claim an active stake in creating the urban landscape of the future, it's probably Dubai. Artificial islands arranged in the shape of the world? Check. The world's only seven-star hotel? Check. And in 2012, it will also become home to the largest, tallest arch bridge ever.

Here's some info on the bridge as envisioned by New York architecture firm Fxfowle:

1) It's one mile long and 670 feet tall. 2) It will have 12 lanes for traffic. 3) It will cost 817 million dollars. 4) The design has Sheikh Mohammed's official stamp of approval. 5) The bridge will carry more than 2,000 vehicles per hour in each direction. 6) A metro line will run across the middle. 7) Construction begins in March, with a slated completion date of 2012.

My favorite description of Dubai, instead of "urban landscape of the future", is quite simply "Babel".

... and wouldn't you know it? Also: No word on any massive language meltdowns - yet.

On a more somber note, Dubai reminds me of Babel not only for its behemoth construction enterprises, but also because there is evidently a great deal of unjust worker exploitation taking place on the work sites.

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Friday, September 14, 2007

Who said Babel doesn't have modern-day applicability?

Tallest in the world, and still going strong...

The Dubai construction crew is an international hodge-podge of workers, many of them exploited. Riots and unrest have been reported from the site previously. No word on any massive language meltdowns - yet.

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Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Proof that Dubai has more money that it can spend

update: Like this post? You'll love: Picture/Report: Dubai to build world's largest arch bridge by 2012


Yep, that's one big man-made island. The AP reports:

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates - With 14,000 laborers toiling day and night, the first of Dubai's three palm-shaped islands is finally about to get its first residents.

The Palm Jumeirah, a 12-square-mile island group, is part of what's billed as the largest land-reclamation project in the world, the product of five years of brute hauling of millions of tons of Persian Gulf sand and quarried rock.

On Nov. 30, the palm will open to some 4,000 residents, said Issam Kazim, a spokesman for Dubai's state-owned developer Nakheel.

When fully complete by 2010, the Palm Jumeirah will be an offshore city, with some 60,000 residents and at least 50,000 workers in 32 hotels and dozens of shops and attractions, Nakheel said.

...

Nakheel's four island projects, the world's largest land reclamation effort, are reshaping Dubai's stretch of the Gulf coast.

The $14 billion project is a key part of this booming city's ambitions to rival Singapore and Hong Kong as a business hub, and surpass Las Vegas as a leisure capital.

...

Reports from those who have wandered through the island's giant homes describe them as cheaply finished and set uncomfortably close to one another. Nakheel rejected an Associated Press request to visit the island. [full article.]

More Dubai links:

Some amazing facts about Dubai from Wikipedia:

"Dubai is the fastest growing city in the world, one-third of the cranes in the world are currently being used to build in Dubai."

"A new project was announced on May 1, 2006 by the authorities. It is named Bawadi and will consist of a 27 billion US-dollar investment intended to increase Dubai's number of hotel rooms by 29,000, doubling it from the current figure offers now. The largest complex will be called Asia, Asia and will be the largest hotel in the world with more than 6,500 rooms."

"Expatriates of various nationalities have been pouring capital into Dubai in the past several years, greatly contributing to the city's prosperity. Iranian expatriates alone are estimated to have invested up to US-$ 200 Billion in Dubai."

"Emaar Properties is currently constructing what will become the world's tallest structure, the Burj Dubai. The final height of the skyscraper is a closely guarded secret - an indication of the developer's resolve to attain the title of the world's tallest building and its intention to hold on to it for as long as possible - but estimates so far point to a height upwards of 810m. Burj Dubai is expected to be completed in 2008. Burj Dubai's neighbour is another behemoth under construction: the world's largest shopping mall - the Dubai Mall."

If you want an example of the Arab world catching-up fast with the West, I give you Dubai.

It's the next New York.

Update: More on Dubai from the UK Daily Mail here.

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