Dubai - Gateway To The Gulf
Dubai - Gateway To The Gulf
Dubai - Gateway To The Gulf
Originally published 1986 as The Commercial Book of Dubai. Second edition 1987 as Dubai –
Gateway to the Gulf. Revised 1988 and 1990. Third edition 1991. Revised 1992, 1993 and
1994. Fourth edition 1997. Revised 1998 and 1999. Reprinted 1999. Fifth edition 2000 as
Dubai – Gateway 2000. Sixth edition 2001 as Dubai – Gateway to the Gulf. Seventh edition
2002. Reprinted 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006. Eighth edition 2007.
© Motivate Publishing 1986, 1991, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2002 and 2007
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any material form
(including photocopying or storing in any medium by electronic means) without the written
permission of the copyright holders. Applications for the copyright holders’ written permission
to reproduce any part of this publication should be addressed to the publishers. In accordance
with the International Copyright Act 1956 and the UAE Federal Copyright Law No 40 of 1992,
any person acting in contravention of this will be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims
for damages.
Photographic credits:
DP World: 22, 24, 25, 53 Gulf Images: 32, 84 Callaghan Walsh: 71, 76L
Dubai Autodrome: 73 Jumeirah: 1, 72, 75T, 78B, Back cover Nakheel: 42
Dubai Civil Aviation: 58 Motivate Publishing: 51 Space Imaging Middle East: 40
Dubai Duty Free: 77, 91 Duncan Chard: 4, 37 David Steele: 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15,
Dubai International Financial Fadi Gwanny: 34 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 26, 38, 39,
Centre: 31 Karel Kita: 29, 33, 35 41, 43, 45, 47, 48T&B, 49, 50, 55,
Dubai Shopping Festival: 28, 90 Greg Newington: 6/7, 57, 63, 75B 56, 61, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 78T,
Dubai World Central: 59 Sheldon Pereira: 97, 98 81T&B, 83, 86, 87, 89T&B, 95, 101
Emirates: 52, 60 Farooq Salik: 69, 96 Andrea Willmore: 85, 92
Gallo Images/Getty Images: 70 Adiseshan Shanker: 76R
Introduction
by His Highness Sheikh Hasher Al Maktoum
Director General, Department of Information
Government of Dubai
Dubai has established itself as the first port of call in the Gulf for businessmen
and tourists, a vital trading link between East and West. For centuries dhows have
plied the waters of the Gulf and reached distant shores in Asia and Africa. Today,
Dubai is still a major trading centre and the business life of our city is as diverse
as it is prosperous.
Under the guidance of His Highness Sheikh Rashid bin Saeed Al Maktoum,
who ruled Dubai from 1958–1990, Dubai entered the modern era, developing a
world-class infrastructure financed through oil revenues. It also earned itself an
enviable trading position, becoming the leading re-export centre of the region.
These achievements were built on by Sheikh Rashid’s sons and successors, the late
Sheikh Maktoum bin Rashid Al Maktoum and by the current Vice-President and
Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates and Ruler of Dubai, Sheikh
Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum.
Dubai has harnessed the latest developments in technology. Our communi
cations and transport systems now complete an enviable infrastructure. Since
October 1985 Dubai has been the home of Emirates airline, offering further
evidence of Dubai’s vital role in linking the Gulf with the rest of the world.
Industrial development has continued to increase, major contributors being the
port of Jebel Ali and the Jebel Ali Free Trade Zone (JAFZA).
However, one of the most important sectors of our economy today is tourism. Front Cover: Traditional
In addition to its excellent hotels which offer first-class leisure facilities, Dubai trading dhows moored
hosts a range of sporting events that appeal to visitors throughout the year. The alongside Dubai Creek,
annual Dubai Desert Classic attracts world-class golfers and golfing enthusiasts, with the Dubai Chamber
while the Dubai Tennis Championships bring in international tennis players and of Commerce & Industries
draw large crowds. Dubai is also the home of the world’s richest horse race, the and the National Bank
Dubai World Cup. Other major sporting events include powerboat racing, motor of Dubai buildings in
rallying and rugby. the background.
The Dubai Shopping Festival, inaugurated in 1996, encapsulates the entrepre
neurial spirit of Dubai and occupies a whole month in the emirate’s busy calendar Back cover: A Bedouin with
of events. In addition to the special retail promotions, it provides entertainment his camels at Bab Al Shams
ranging from street parades to firework displays. A similar annual festival, Dubai Desert Resort and Spa.
Summer Surprises, attracts throngs of visitors in summer.
This book gives an excellent account of the commercial, industrial and Left: Emirates Towers have
financial life of our city and also documents its many cultural, sporting and been a Dubai landmark
tourist attractions. Through this publication you will also learn something of the since the beginning of
history of our land, its heritage and its people. the new millennium.
Despite its modernity, Dubai holds fast to time-honoured principles and
traditions, including that of hospitality for which the Arab World is renowned. I Following spread: Many
am delighted to welcome you to Dubai and invite you to experience first hand attractive wilderness
the many and varied aspects of our beautiful emirate. areas are within a couple
of hours drive from the
centre of Dubai.
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Contents
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Dubai – Gateway to the Gulf United Arab Emirates
fair. It is also the hometown of the UAE’s late President, Sheikh Zayed, who was
previously a revered governor of the region; it was under his guidance that the
city developed so rapidly.
Another inland area of Abu Dhabi is the Liwa, the ancestral home of the ruling
Al Nahyan family for at least two centuries. The Liwa is formed by a crescent of
scattered mini-oases, each settlement originally comprising just a few mud houses
and a scattering of date palms. Now even this remote corner, once seen only by
the Bedouin and a handful of explorers, has been touched by development, with
tarred highways and weekend trippers exploring the magnificent dunes of the
adjacent Rub al-Khali (The Empty Quarter).
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Dubai – Gateway to the Gulf United Arab Emirates
of Fujairah, which covers an area totalling some 1,300 square kilometres, made
up of mountain and coastal plain. Effectively cut off from the rest of the country
until a decade ago, when a tarred road from Masafi was constructed, Fujairah has
a quiet charm of its own with traditional mud forts, fishing villages and date
plantations fed by aflaj (irrigation channels).
Today, Fujairah also has a trade centre, a thriving port and an international
airport, part of a strategy to increase its revenues from tourism. The town is
dominated by a magnificent old fort that, until recently, bore the scars of a
British naval bombardment in 1920.
Back on the Gulf coast are the emirates of Ajman and Umm al-Qaiwain, both
developed from fishing villages, an inheritance demonstrated today by Umm al-
Qaiwain being the site of a fishing research centre, and Ajman having the largest
dhow-building yard in the country. Each emirate also has its own historic forts.
Ra’s al-Khaimah, which borders Oman’s Musandam Peninsula, has a rich history,
and it too once had a period of pre-eminence. It’s the site of the lost city of Julfar,
which flourished until the 18th-century AD when it was abandoned and forgotten.
The town’s historical fort is now one of the best museums in the country.
Ra’s al-Khaimah’s 1,700 square kilometres are mostly mountainous, and the
emirate enjoys relatively good water supplies from the Hajar Mountains,
permitting a well-developed agricultural sector that even produces strawberries
for export to Europe. Its industries include quarrying and pharmaceuticals; there’s
also a port, and limited hydrocarbon reserves are now being exploited.
Apart from being the most rugged of the emirates, Ra’s al-Khaimah also offers
attractions such as hot springs, hidden date plantations and abandoned villages.
Yet its main town features many modern amenities, including quality hotels and
an international airport. The coastline is rich in marine life and is especially
popular with divers.
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