United Arab Emirates: Dubai
Overview
Images
Sightseeing
Key Attractions
Further Distractions
Tours of the City
Restaurants
Nightlife
Sport
Shopping
Culture
Excursions
Special Events
Business Etiquette
Getting there
Getting Around
City Statistics
Country guide
Cities:
--No Location Selected--
Abu Dhabi
Overview
Overview
Within hours of arriving first timers soon usually stop mouthing trite phrases like ‘but that is impossible' or ‘surely they couldn't'. In
go-getting ultra ambitious
Dubai nothing is impossible and they surely could. Think lush
championship golf courses
in the desert, massive
manmade islands
in the shape of the world and
ski slopes
in one of the most arid corners of the planet.
Dubai is no longer looking over its shoulder at ‘The West'; it is far too busy showing what an Arabic emirate can do on its own with what many observers are increasingly viewing as an insight into the future of cities the world over.
It is difficult to believe today that less than a century ago Dubai was little more than a desert-strewn wildscape where
Bedouin tribes
roamed the sands and a huddle of settlers crowded around the banks of the lifeblood creek. Even as Europe embarked on the mass industrial destruction of WWI, Dubai still had no running water, no real roads and the main mode of transport was the camel.
Dubai first grew as a hub on the
ancient trading route
between Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley and, by the 19th century, a
small fishing village
had taken root at the mouth of Dubai Creek. The village was inhabited by the Bani Yas tribe, who were led by the Maktoum family, the dynasty that still presides over Dubai today.
The city's remarkable success story really began in the 1960s. During the process of shaking off the shackles of
British colonial rule
,
oil
was struck in 1966 and Dubai has never looked back. Since the 1960s, the population has mushroomed to almost 1.5 million and now an ever-growing number of hotels welcome in the temporary
expat workers
and tourists who help propel the economy.
Indeed, only around a quarter of the emirate's population are actually ethnically Emirati in a population mixture that has to be one of the world's most
cosmopolitan
. This diversity discourages any real ethnic tensions and while conflict might rage further north in Iraq, Dubai so far has been trouble free.
Dubai's evolution has been dramatic, with
sweeping skyscrapers
and gleaming office blocks rising up everywhere. The rulers of Dubai have a penchant for grand projects - one year the
world's tallest tower
(Burj Arab), the next a string of
offshore manmade islands
(the three Palms and the World) and now
Dubailand
, a massive project that will bring over 45 major projects to a massive leisure oasis in the desert.
Dubai seems to know no end to its ambition, nor does it have any inhibitions, with more
grandiose plans
slated, such as Dubai Mall (the
world's largest mall
) and the
colossal new airport
near Jebel Ali, which will dwarf the existing one, already the Middle East's busiest.
Even with regional instability in recent years tourism (now responsible for 30% of the emirate's GDP) remains remarkably resilient in this tolerant and stable part of the Arab world with more and more tourists flocking to Dubai every year. This is unsurprising really, considering the
idyllic climate
for much of the year, with
constant sunshine
and only an average of five days of rainfall annually. During summer, however, the heat is extreme, making trips away from air-conditioned vehicles and buildings unbearable.
The future prospects of Dubai's tourist industry and its economic situation as a whole may ultimately be governed by developments in the rest of the Middle East, but for now it is a city on the rise and rise.
© 2006 Columbus Travel Publishing Ltd.
Disclaimer
Home
Hotels
Flights
Destinations
Specials
Meetings & Events
About GHA
Agents
Country guides
City guides
Airport guides
Search by country
Search by brand
Search by map
Spa
City Break
Family
Golf
Meetings
Who we are
News room
Contact
Regional offices
Service center
Partners
Earn commissions
Register
Login
Language:
English
Currency:
CAD ($)
CHF
EUR (€)
GBP (£)
US Dollar ($)
About
|
Disclaimer
|
Terms & Conditions
|
Privacy Policy
|
Site Map
|
Destinations
Hotels - Search by country
Hotels - Search by brand
Hotels - Search by map
Flights
Destinations - Country guides
Destinations - City guides
Airport guides
Specials - Wellness & Spa
Specials - Culinary
Specials - Romantic
Specials - Family
Specials - Sports
Meetings & Events - Meetings
About GHA - Who we are
About GHA - News room
About GHA - Contact
About GHA - Regional offices
About GHA - Service center
Agents - Earn commissions
Sitemap
Anantara
|
First Hotels
|
Kempinski Hotels
|
Marco Polo Hotel
Mirvac Hotels & Resorts
|
Omni Hotels
|
Pan Pacific Hotels and Resorts
|
Parkroyal Hotels
The Doyle Collection
|
The Leela Palaces, Hotels and Resorts
|
Tivoli Hotels & Resorts
Business
|
CityBreak
|
Spa
|
Family
|
Golf