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Thursday, 26 November 2009 06:07 UAE time

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Building Al Ain

by This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it  on Saturday, 30 May 2009
The plan includes a number of open spaces for community gathering.

What is the population of Al Ain today?

As a region, around 400,000, while as a city, almost 300,000. As the plan runs through to 2030, by this time we hope to accommodate a population of 1 million. More than double the current population.

Today Abu Dhabi is all about sustainability. How do you plan for this kind of growth while being sensitive to the principles of sustainability?

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In order for us to digest this move we have to keep in mind that this plan covers the next 21 years.

You put forward a scenario that can accommodate your ambitions.

Looking at the reality, no one knows what will happen by 2030 so from a planning perspective we can put down scenarios and growth projections, and make decisions regarding directions of growth in the urban environment, then put in place rules, policies and plans to ease the impact of that growth.

We need policies that cover infra-structure for example, and our need to generate more power and water, and to create more jobs.

The most successful plans are those based on a more realistic approach — ones that are flexible so that with each review you can devise, amend, and if necessary, upgrade your plans.

When you start thinking for the long run, you do not table a low estimation of population growth, because with any sudden growth beyond your expectations, you would get behind. So you put forward a scenario that can accommodate your ambitions.

It’s a matter of how you look at things in a strategic way.

How have you planned the public transport infrastructure?


The urban transport plan for the city is multi-model. It will fit in with the Abu Dhabi surface transport master plan (STMP). The main spines discussed earlier make it easier to introduce a light train, an underground subway, or a bus system.

The inter-city connections to Abu Dhabi and Dubai will rely on a major train with a stop in downtown Al Ain. The plan has designated certain sites and put a hold on certain downtown areas to allow for that. Once such a train reaches the urban boundaries it will be taken underground all the way to the downtown terminal.

Most of Al Ain’s streets have a big median in the middle, between 4m to 8m, and the buildings have 50m setbacks from the median.

This enables traffic and utility planners to accommodate which ever mode of public transport is required.

This could include a tram in the middle along the median, or an underground system, and we could also accommodate a 4th lane dedicated to a bus service or to a car pooling system. We are not going to claim more land. The land is already there. But we are going to redesign the length of the corridor.

The STMP will reveal to the municipality what we need to execute, when by, and within what budget. Such a plan will lead to an action plan and then to detailed budgeting.

From a developmental point of view, Abu Dhabi is progressing comparatively well despite the global climate. To what would you attribute this?


There is wisdom behind holding your horses and releasing them at the right time. To some extent, comparing against some experiences in the Middle East, I would assume it was a little more conservative in the beginning.

There were some strong movements, two or three years ago, but those movements were controlled in a way that when the crisis hit, the government had the upper hand to decide on the health of those projects.

Was Plan Al Ain 2030 inspired by any particular cities worldwide?


The main challenge for Al Ain is Al Ain itself. How can we make it livable, attractive, and yet still manageable?

How can we market Al Ain city as a relaxed urban centre where you can drive from work to your home in 15 minutes maximum?

Then there is the added value. Al Ain has a natural setting, with Hafeet Mountain, the six oases, the wadis and the dunes. These are what directed and drove the planning of the city.

We planned so delicately because we want Al Ain to stay Al Ain.

We wanted to maintain the history and the setting, and the high percentage of locals within the total population. All these provide a blend of social and cultural characteristics that energise any planner to place them within an urban setting.

We are proud today, to say we are the city of G+4 [No building in Al Ain is more than four storeys high]. Many people say, ‘Tomorrow you will have skyscrapers like any other Gulf city.’ But no, we do not need them. Al Ain is for those who appreciate the uniqueness of the city. It’s for those who empathise with our cause of maintaining an inland urban setting, specially tailored and customised to maintain its unique sense of place and people. With that approach, we have tried to tackle the issue of master planning this city.

Sustaining Al Ain

The Abu Dhabi Emirate has focused its sustainable construction ambitions behind the wide-ranging Estidama initiative that covers environmental, economic, social and cultural sustainability.

Al Salamani reveals how Plan Al Ain 2030 works alongside the practicalities of Abu Dhabi’s sustainability drive.

The Emirate of Abu Dhabi has pledged to generate 7% of its power from renewable energy sources by 2020. How does your plan facilitate this?

Developers will have the freedom to suggest power supply, water treatment methods, compost plants, recycling procedures, and other projects that will ease the impact on the environment and the existing framework of the city. For example, one of the developers plans to power part of his development with huge solar plants.

It’s a matter of regulations and rules. In Abu Dhabi, we are capable of controlling that because of the nature of the big developers. They are to some extent supported and encouraged by the government to attract private sector involvement. All parties would respond positively to any clear, efficient and competent policy on energy saving and energy regeneration that promotes a carbon zero or carbon neutral environment.

Would you support moves to make the Pearl Rating System, under the Estidama initiative, regulatory, or is a voluntary system sufficient?

This is a worldwide dilemma that we in architecture call passive and active systems. Passive systems include aspects like building orientation. Most active systems start with subsidising.

In all our work there is always an engineering solution, an education solution, and a law enforcement solution. If you have a problem with a roundabout, it is not enough to include a traffic light. It is required that whoever passes the red signal will be stopped and could be banned from driving.

Law enforcement in our case is preparing the right building code and the specifications together with supportive measures for anyone who would like to take that option.


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