flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

$100 billion 'city from scratch' taking shape in Saudi Arabia

Mixed-Use

$100 billion 'city from scratch' taking shape in Saudi Arabia

The new King Abdullah Economic City was conceived to diversify the kingdom's oil-dependent economy by focusing more in its shipping industry.


By BD+C Staff | April 7, 2015
Construction site updates from the new $100 billion Saudi Arabian city

The city constructed from scratch off the Red Sea coast will give its port access to the Suez Canal, reflecting the government’s attempt to diversify its oil-dependent economy by focusing more in its shipping industry. Rendering courtesy of the King Abdullah Economic City.

Back in 2005, the Saudi government announced plans to create a new city (from scratch) on its western coast that will be the size of Washington D.C. The Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat reports that construction is already under way.

The city is named after the late King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, who died in January 2015. Its formal name is the King Abdullah Economic City (KAEC).

Having a city on the peninsular country’s western coast will give it access to the Suez Canal, reflecting the government’s attempt to diversify its oil-dependent economy by focusing more in its shipping industry. 

According to the CTBUH, Saudi Arabia hopes the port will be part of a new Silk Road that will connect with Mediterranean countries and Southern Europe.

Eric Reguly, a journalist of Canada’s Globe and Mail newspaper, who visited the under-construction city a few months ago, said the site looks more like a movie set.

“The rest of the city is pretty much an expanse of nothing, save for a suburb of villas, an international school and, a dozen kilometers to the north, a container-ship port, and a few factories in an area that could double as a stage set for a Mad Max film,” Reguly writes. 

During a recent interview with Public Radio International, Reguly said that the city’s reliance on cars is an obvious flaw. “"It's going to be very much dependent on cheap oil," he adds, which was the very thing the city was designed to avoid.

For more information on the project, visit The Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat and Globe and Mail.

Related Stories

Mixed-Use | Apr 7, 2019

Chicago-area joint venture antes up $1 billion for Opportunity Zone development investment

Decennial Group says it’s looking at 250 potential projects, primarily in America’s heartland and rural areas.

Mixed-Use | Mar 11, 2019

Podcast: Sterling Bay’s Andy Gloor discusses Chicago’s grandiose Lincoln Yards Plan

Lincoln Yards is Sterling Bay’s ambitious riverfront development of formerly industrial land between Bucktown and Lincoln Park.

Mixed-Use | Feb 21, 2019

An R&D-oriented innovation district is taking shape in the heart of Durham, N.C.

Its buildout has included converting old tobacco warehouses into offices and labs.

Mixed-Use | Feb 19, 2019

Sunset Library in Brooklyn will be capped with 50 affordable residences

Magnusson Architecture and Planning is designing the facility.

Mixed-Use | Feb 18, 2019

Seaport World Trade Center will offer Bostonians 737,000 sf of waterfront mixed-use space

Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects is designing the project.

Mixed-Use | Jan 22, 2019

Mixed-use skyscraper rises in the heart of metropolitan Tokyo

Pickard Chilton designed the building.

Mixed-Use | Dec 14, 2018

Schmidt Hammer Lassen’s first U.S. project breaks ground in Detroit

The mixed-use development will connect some of Detroit’s key public spaces.

Mixed-Use | Dec 10, 2018

Luxury residential development completes in downtown Charleston

JE Dunn was the general contractor for the project and The Preston Partnership is the architect of record.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021