I came across this by chance today.
Dredging contractor Jan De Nul announced back in December 2006 that Nakheel had awarded them a new contract for a new island - called New Island!
It's to be reclaimed 50kms out into the Gulf in 20m deep water and is to be crescent shaped.
Apologies for the poor image - it was taken from the Press Release pdf. In the top left you'll see where the island is going to be located way out into the Gulf and off the Jebel Ali Palm.
In order to be built, the island will require:
~ 3 dredging vessels
~ 1 stone dumping vessel
~ 1 positioning pontoon
~ 29 million m³ of sand
~ 3 million m³ of rock
~ US$115 million (422, 380,000 dirhams)
~ 27 months to complete
Work started on the project in December 2006 and, according to the JDN Press Release, the island's "primary function is to provide shelter for recreational vessels".
So far, the project isn't showing on the Nakheel website.
The Jan De Nul Press Release can be found here.
According to this Wikipedia entry which records the claimed distance, 50kms puts the island outside the UAE maritime contiguous zone. Also see this report which defines the continental shelf boundary between the UAE and Iran.
All this effort and money for a shelter island?
Did I hear someone say casino? (Just a hunch!)
27 April 2007
25 April 2007
Spiderman on the Burj Al Arab
The cleaning systems on the Burj are a work of engineering art. The cleaning platforms which service the curved façade windows, run on tracks mounted on each side of the windows. Likewise, the platforms on the outer curved support columns run on tracks which can be seen in the above image on the front of the structure.
The side windows are cleaned using a conventional platform suspended from divots mounted on the roof.
The underneath of the helipad has another custom platform which rotates on rails around the underside.
The rest is done by men like this guy - dangling from a rope, using a water-blaster, and praying that the rope doesn't break!
He's got about 200 metres between him and terra firma!
The side windows are cleaned using a conventional platform suspended from divots mounted on the roof.
The underneath of the helipad has another custom platform which rotates on rails around the underside.
The rest is done by men like this guy - dangling from a rope, using a water-blaster, and praying that the rope doesn't break!
He's got about 200 metres between him and terra firma!
Labels:
Burj al Arab,
Dubai,
UAE
18 April 2007
Our Baby is for Sale
UPDATE: She's sold. We cried. We're sad. It was like saying goodbye to an old friend. Onwards and upwards.
Reluctantly, because of the prolonged time that we'll be spending in Melbourne over the next few months, we're selling our beloved Honda MRV.
She's carried us on many of our local adventures and we've seen beautiful parts of the UAE and Oman in safety and style. She's definitely the best vehicle that either of us have owned.
Here are the details:
~ Registered October 2004
~ Low Mileage <30,000 km
~ Excellent Condition
~ Full service history with Al Futtaim Motors
~ Desert Rock Metallic paint (Pale Gold)
~ Caring lady owners
~ Never been raced!
~ 75,000 dirhams o.n.o.
If you, or someone you know, would like to buy our baby and treat her with the respect that she deserves, you can contact us through the comments section on this blog or email us at: matdxb(at)freenet.de.
Reluctantly, because of the prolonged time that we'll be spending in Melbourne over the next few months, we're selling our beloved Honda MRV.
She's carried us on many of our local adventures and we've seen beautiful parts of the UAE and Oman in safety and style. She's definitely the best vehicle that either of us have owned.
Here are the details:
~ Registered October 2004
~ Low Mileage <30,000 km
~ Excellent Condition
~ Full service history with Al Futtaim Motors
~ Desert Rock Metallic paint (Pale Gold)
~ Caring lady owners
~ Never been raced!
~ 75,000 dirhams o.n.o.
If you, or someone you know, would like to buy our baby and treat her with the respect that she deserves, you can contact us through the comments section on this blog or email us at: matdxb(at)freenet.de.
3 April 2007
On the Move in Melbourne
I think that this is the longest time that we’ve been away from this blog, since its inception, as we’ve been hellishly busy and travelling again.
Leaving Berlin and onto Dubai
After leaving Berlin, we were a week in Dubai as we sorted out business details around our new company which is now up and running in the DIC – yay! Bureaucracy has certainly increased over the years in Dubai. When J set up her first company 4 years ago, it was operational and legal within 10 days. This time, it took us 4 months to get everything established, including a detailed Business Plan which had to be presented to the DIC management, AND it was read as they came back with “suggestions” on how we could “enhance” our application by adding in some embellishment!
We walked Umm Suqeim Beach and, along with a large part of the Dubai population, watched in dismay as a construction site wall was erected along the beach which indicated that one of the last free Dubai beaches was about to be lost to the public by yet another reclaimed land development project planned for the area.
The Dubai wall goes up
There was also a lot activity off the shore with tugs and barges emptying loads of muddy sand in the first efforts of reclamation. The muck stank – and the northern part of the beach (towards the fishing port and breakwater) now has very soft sand with the consistency of mud.
A fully laden barge is pushed into position
Within minutes it doubles in height, as it splits in two to spill its load onto the sea floor
Umm Suqeim III is very popular with everyone – it’s the best place for tourists to photograph the Burj Al Arab and to laze in the sun, and it’s used by Dubai residents for sunbathing, swimming, picnics, dinners, surfing, kitesurfing, walking and running. The place is packed out each New Year’s Eve as everyone comes to watch the midnight fireworks displays from the Burj, JBH and Madinat.
Dubai residents and visitors enjoy the beach
Thankfully, it appears as if the beach has been saved from development, due to the intervention of Sheikh Mohammed who has stepped in to halt the project. Good sense prevails, and not so healthy tourist numbers would indicate that many vacationers aren’t returning to Dubai on a regular basis. Not everyone can afford to stay in luxury 5+ star beachfront hotels, and if one of the last remaining free beaches is taken away, there is one less reason for a lot of the tourists wanting sun, sea and sand to come to Dubai.
Melbourne bound
After a week of madness which included the surprisingly easy process of having to get our eCards renewed (oops – they had expired but luckily we were allowed back into Dxb!), we were back on a plane headed for Melbourne, Australia, where we’ve been for the past 10 days. We’re due to leave at the end of this week.
Melbourne has been a blast, and we are excited to have the opportunity to station ourselves here for a while from the middle of this year, as we have a few projects down this way which would require us to be in Melbourne for longer stints.
Plusses for this include:
- incredibly cheap rents (when compared to Dubai) for apartments within walking distance of the city. (For around 6,000 dirhams per month, we can get a quiet 2 bedroom apartment with pool, gym, tennis court and a 20 min. walk to the office)
- decent infrastructure in the forms of internet and telephony (no more Big Brother Etisalat and yes, we can freely Skype!), and great public transportation including trams, buses and trains.
- what construction there is going on stops at 5pm and doesn’t resume until 8am and they don’t work on weekends. It’s so quiet in the middle of the city!
- we will get to explore Australia and this part of the world even more that we already have.
- amazing food – yes, better quality than that of Dubai – something which I can’t believe that I would ever be able to state.
Minuses would be:
- the weather over winter – bitterly cold and wet!
- we are further away from J’s kids who live and school in Germany.
Getting back to the food, we’ve been staying with our good friend T, and part of the family ritual is to visit the South Melbourne food markets every weekend to buy supplies for the coming week. This place is just awesome, and photographically it has me grinning from ear to ear!
Here are "just a few" of the many images I've taken:
My favourite shop - the seafood bar!
Lots of yummy prawns, crayfish and oysters
Olives, dolma and dips
Theo's Deli is very popular
Do you want large or small Turkish bread?
Mixed dried fruit and nuts
Fresh olives
The store owners gather for their daily coffee and chat about the state of the nation
Apples and tomatoes
Big chocolate Easter eggs
Fresh flowers which also smell divine
One of the fruit stalls
Ferdinand, Skippy, Bambi and Schnappi on the menu!
The t-shirt says it all - she's a faaarking Magpies supporter!
What's good today?
Global coffee beans
Cute cupcakes
Every possible type of dip
Hmmph, they go off to play and leave me here!
Leaving Berlin and onto Dubai
After leaving Berlin, we were a week in Dubai as we sorted out business details around our new company which is now up and running in the DIC – yay! Bureaucracy has certainly increased over the years in Dubai. When J set up her first company 4 years ago, it was operational and legal within 10 days. This time, it took us 4 months to get everything established, including a detailed Business Plan which had to be presented to the DIC management, AND it was read as they came back with “suggestions” on how we could “enhance” our application by adding in some embellishment!
We walked Umm Suqeim Beach and, along with a large part of the Dubai population, watched in dismay as a construction site wall was erected along the beach which indicated that one of the last free Dubai beaches was about to be lost to the public by yet another reclaimed land development project planned for the area.
The Dubai wall goes up
There was also a lot activity off the shore with tugs and barges emptying loads of muddy sand in the first efforts of reclamation. The muck stank – and the northern part of the beach (towards the fishing port and breakwater) now has very soft sand with the consistency of mud.
A fully laden barge is pushed into position
Within minutes it doubles in height, as it splits in two to spill its load onto the sea floor
Umm Suqeim III is very popular with everyone – it’s the best place for tourists to photograph the Burj Al Arab and to laze in the sun, and it’s used by Dubai residents for sunbathing, swimming, picnics, dinners, surfing, kitesurfing, walking and running. The place is packed out each New Year’s Eve as everyone comes to watch the midnight fireworks displays from the Burj, JBH and Madinat.
Dubai residents and visitors enjoy the beach
Thankfully, it appears as if the beach has been saved from development, due to the intervention of Sheikh Mohammed who has stepped in to halt the project. Good sense prevails, and not so healthy tourist numbers would indicate that many vacationers aren’t returning to Dubai on a regular basis. Not everyone can afford to stay in luxury 5+ star beachfront hotels, and if one of the last remaining free beaches is taken away, there is one less reason for a lot of the tourists wanting sun, sea and sand to come to Dubai.
Melbourne bound
After a week of madness which included the surprisingly easy process of having to get our eCards renewed (oops – they had expired but luckily we were allowed back into Dxb!), we were back on a plane headed for Melbourne, Australia, where we’ve been for the past 10 days. We’re due to leave at the end of this week.
Melbourne has been a blast, and we are excited to have the opportunity to station ourselves here for a while from the middle of this year, as we have a few projects down this way which would require us to be in Melbourne for longer stints.
Plusses for this include:
- incredibly cheap rents (when compared to Dubai) for apartments within walking distance of the city. (For around 6,000 dirhams per month, we can get a quiet 2 bedroom apartment with pool, gym, tennis court and a 20 min. walk to the office)
- decent infrastructure in the forms of internet and telephony (no more Big Brother Etisalat and yes, we can freely Skype!), and great public transportation including trams, buses and trains.
- what construction there is going on stops at 5pm and doesn’t resume until 8am and they don’t work on weekends. It’s so quiet in the middle of the city!
- we will get to explore Australia and this part of the world even more that we already have.
- amazing food – yes, better quality than that of Dubai – something which I can’t believe that I would ever be able to state.
Minuses would be:
- the weather over winter – bitterly cold and wet!
- we are further away from J’s kids who live and school in Germany.
Getting back to the food, we’ve been staying with our good friend T, and part of the family ritual is to visit the South Melbourne food markets every weekend to buy supplies for the coming week. This place is just awesome, and photographically it has me grinning from ear to ear!
Here are "just a few" of the many images I've taken:
Click on the images to enlarge them
My favourite shop - the seafood bar!
Lots of yummy prawns, crayfish and oysters
Olives, dolma and dips
Theo's Deli is very popular
Do you want large or small Turkish bread?
Mixed dried fruit and nuts
Fresh olives
The store owners gather for their daily coffee and chat about the state of the nation
Apples and tomatoes
Big chocolate Easter eggs
Fresh flowers which also smell divine
One of the fruit stalls
Ferdinand, Skippy, Bambi and Schnappi on the menu!
The t-shirt says it all - she's a faaarking Magpies supporter!
What's good today?
Global coffee beans
Cute cupcakes
Every possible type of dip
Hmmph, they go off to play and leave me here!
It’s J’s birthday tomorrow. Happy Birthday J – may all your dreams and wishes come true!
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