Dubai International City

International City, Dubai
City
Dubai International City

Flag
Nickname(s): IC; IC Phase 1; Warsan 1; IC Dubai
Coordinates: 25°8′31″N 55°24′17.06″E / 25.14194°N 55.4047389°E / 25.14194; 55.4047389Coordinates: 25°8′31″N 55°24′17.06″E / 25.14194°N 55.4047389°E / 25.14194; 55.4047389
Country United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates
Emirate Dubai Dubai
City Dubai
Incorporated July 10, 2004 (2004-07-10)
Founded by Nakheel Properties
Area
  Total 8.2 km2 (3.16 sq mi)
  Land 8.0 km2 (3.08 sq mi)
  Water 0.2 km2 (0.8 sq mi)
Population (Jan. 2010)
  Total 120,000
  Rank 117
  Density 15,000/km2 (40,000/sq mi)
Time zone AST (UTC+4)
  Summer (DST) AST (UTC+4)
Phone Code +971 and 4
FIPS code (AE)10-4
Website www.internationalcity.ae

Dubai International city is a country-themed architecture of residences, business, and tourist attractions. Spreading over an area of 800 hectares (8 million square meters), the arrangement of the city is inspired by the traditional carpets of Middle East. Once completed, the project will contain studio and one bedroom apartments and accommodate over 12,000 residents.

Dubai International City is located in the Al Warsan region of Dubai, opposite to the Dubai Central Fruit and Vegetable Market.

It is composed of 485 buildings embraces the residential districts of Central Business District (CBD), Persia, Greece, Spain, Morocco, England, France, Italy, Russia, China and Emirates. Apart from these districts that were initially planned for Dubai International City namely Lake District and Forbidden City are now on put on hold due to the effects of the Global Financial Recession. Attractions in the city includes the Dragon Mart, which is the worlds biggest machinery and equipment market.

Projects

Residential districts

The Residential District of Dubai international city is expected to have numerous country specific and themed residential developments and retail outlets.

The plans include ten country-specific districts:

The Forbidden City

The Forbidden city will encompass an area of 240,000 square metres with parking facilities for 2,000 cars, the city is the replica of Forbidden City of Beijing, China.

The Lake District

The Lake District surrounds the Al Warsan Lake. The lake is off limits to public.

Dragon Mart

DragonMart, developed by Chinamex, is a large mall for wholesale purchase of Chinese products. The large size of this mall makes it a gateway for customers making purchase runs throughout the Middle Eastern and North African Markets, and is a platform for Chinese traders and manufacturers seeking regional market entry.

The mall has been a commercial success and construction has started on a second mall adjacent to Dragon Mart that will have 175,000 square metres of space and 4,500 parking spaces. The project was completed in December 2015.[1]

Issues

Nakheel's International City Development has been questioned by news articles with controversies and issues. These articles claim International City has struggled with a poor reputation and negative press reports stemming from various issues including problems with its own sewage systems and the nearby sewage facility, access to the site, and a perceived lack of amenities. A follow-up poll from Emirates 24-7 revealed that a huge percentage – 91 percent – of readers showed “a marked aversion to investing in International City units.” A considerable 67 percent said they “would not touch the place.” [2]

Sewage plant proximity

Due to its proximity to the Sewage Treatment Plant, and constant overflow, certain clusters like Morocco, Emirates & China are subjected to the odor of sewage when the wind direction changes at night.

Traffic

Entering and exiting the city during rush hour can require you to spend 10–20 minutes gridlocked. There are two major entry and one major exit to the city. [3]

Law and order

While Nakheel's noble intentions were to make low and medium cost housing available to the masses (who were suffering due to the real-estate boom up until mid 2008 and before the GFC) by providing medium and low income earners with legal and decent housing instead of resorting to illegitimate Villa Sharing, Dubai was badly hit by the Global Financial Crisis. This led to an instant devaluation or rentals by 75% - 80% of its value in 2008. Due to this sudden drop in prices, even the extremely lowest income group (laborers, truck drivers, taxi drivers) identified this area as a potential upgrade to their existing Labor camps.[4] Coupled with Nakheel's financial downfall, controls and checks over the city's security, compliance to regulations and maintenance of infrastructure were dropped beginning in January 2009 by the developer who used to control and maintain this earlier.[5]

Travel

The community is serviced by the RTA bus service. Bus routes:

You may plan and time your journey using the RTA Website RTA Wojhati Route Planner or inquire about your route/bus/connectivity at the RTA Call Center 800 9090.

Medical Facilities

The hospitals are closely located, with Rashid Hospital around 15 minutes driving distance from the Location. However, there are Polyclinics such as Apple Clinic, located in France Cluster [P 03] and Apple International Polyclinic, located in Greece Cluster [K 14] offering Primary care facilities.

Recent regulations implemented by the Municipality of Dubai, will greatly address the prevalence of Shisha [Arabic Tobacco] parlors housed in many buildings.

See also

References

  1. "Schumpeter: Mall of the masses: The traders in Dubai’s Dragon Mart are kitting out the emerging world’s new middle class", The Economist, dated 14 April 2012.
  2. Alice Johnson, Gulf News Staff (2008-06-03). "Two-week sewage flood hits International City". Gulf News. Retrieved 2011-06-19.
  3. Gulf News (2008-07-18). "IC Traffic worsens". Gulf News. Retrieved 2011-06-19.
  4. Gulf News (2011-02-24). "International City: Squalor township". Gulf News. Retrieved 2011-06-19.
  5. Gulf News (2009-11-25). "Reader helps police to bust brothel in International City". Gulf News. Retrieved 2011-06-19.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 06, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.