Posted on 04/17/2015 5:42:52 PM PDT by Vince Ferrer
The King Abdullah Economic City, or KAEC (pronounced cake), will be slightly larger than Washington DC and home to approximately two million residents.
Covering 70 square miles, the metropolis is costing £67 billion ($100 billion) and lies 100km from Jeddah, the commercial hub of the kingdom, near the Red Sea.
The late king had pinned his hopes for his countrys future on the new-build, although at the moment it resembles a dusty building site dotted with cranes and work is not likely to be completed for ten years, at least.
So far 15 per cent has been built, as public facilities and residential areas are still under construction. Plans include a port, industrial complex, a financial island, beach facilities and residential neighbourhoods.
KAEC is one of four new cities being built to diversify an economy that is overly dependent on oil. Already it has its own website showing plans, maps and including details on how to invest.
Fadi Al-Rasheed, the managing director of Emaar Economic City, the publicly traded Saudi company that runs the entire KAEC project.
Were building with the 65 per cent of the population who are under 30 in mind, he explains.
And we have almost 200,000 Saudis studying abroad. Inevitably they are going to change things when they come back.
Given that more women than men graduate from university, it is likely the Saudi landscape will shift over the coming years in more ways that one.
There are 90 km of roads in use in KAEC but, under present deeply held religious beliefs prohibiting it, no women in the country are able to drive on them.
The citys future hinges on many things including the complex relationships between health, education, housing and employment requirements and infrastructure.
It will also open up transport links around the kingdom and internationally.
We aim to create one of the worlds largest ports, Rayan Bukhari, a young manager at the King Abdullah port told .
Were not competing with Jeddahs Islamic port but we are going to take business away from Jebel Ali in Dubai. Thats because of our quicker, more automated offloading and customs procedure.
Freight arriving at the port will be taken directly to the capital via the new land bridge, he says, At the moment lots of products destined for Riyadh are shipped to Dubai, but that will change. Theyll be shipped here as it is cheaper and can be delivered more quickly within the Kingdom.
KAEC is also expected to become an important tourist stopover for pilgrims, aided by the fact Mecca and Medina are on the high speed train network that links KAEC with the two holy cities.
At the moment Mecca is one hour and twenty minutes drive away and Medina is three hours by car.
The Haramain train station will open at the end of this year and has been designed by British architect Norman Foster, also the man behind Londons Gerkin skyscraper and New Yorks Hearst Tower.
The station will provide acceleration to areas developmental plan and will reduce the journey to Jeddah to 30 minutes.The megaproject on KAEC was announced in 2005.
The project is largely privately funded and the government has set up an Economic Cities Authority overseeing the four megacities able to deal swiftly with every licence, construction permit and approval needed.
I hope it’s a tasty dessert.
Oops, I should have realized there are no editors on the internet anymore.
A mega city in the middle of the desert. No water, no farms, no manufacturing, no mines, just everyone with an office job.
What could go wrong?
Diversifying into what?
Isn’t one Abu Dhabi enough?
-- Percy Bysshe Shelley
Yum. Cake
They want to copy the Dubai model. Dubai has no real resources, but became a financial powerhouse in the Arab world. They are going to try to build a manufacturing and finance industry.
If it is, then they are out of luck. They have no water, and when no one wants their oil, they will disappear if they can't find something else to do. They can probably plaster the whole peninsula with solar panels and sell the electricity.
In the middle of dessert? Sweet!
I must confess that Red Sea sunsets are purty cool.
I ahtr Arabs in the middle of my pie and coffee!
Hate, should have been, sorry
I don’t look at finance as diversifying. What happens to Dubai tomorrow if all the oil money stops?
Industry? They would have to import the workers, just like they do for construction.
Some apropriate mixed metaphor of “he couldn’t have his cake and he didnt build that, and they didnt come,” or something like that.
CHANGE OF PLANS!
Instead of a £67 BILLION Megacity, the Saudis are investing in a nuclear breeder reactor,200,000 high speed centrifuges, a 20 mile particle accelerator, a 200,000 Gigawatt nuclear power plant , rocketry facilities and an interplanetary laser generator.
Of course it ALL will be disguised as a £67 BILLION Megacity.
Alahu WACKbar!/S
Think I learned this as a kid in Bible school:
The foolish man built his house upon the sand,
The foolish man built his house upon the sand,
The foolish man built his house upon the sand,
And the house on sand went splat!
The wise man built his house upon the Rock,
The wise man built his house upon the Rock,
The wise man built his house upon the Rock,
And the house on the Rock stood firm!
No butterflies...
I can pretty much guaranty that this will be no gay-themed “KAEC”.
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