It's Not a Mirage: Dubai Is Building a Sports Oasis
By LORNE MANLY
Published: May 9, 2006
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — In the middle of a stretch of desert, with little more than a few spindly trees for company, David Krekoski stepped out of his Caterpillar bulldozer to smoke a cigarette.
Kamran Jebreili/Associated Press
Dubai, with 1.4 million residents, will have to attract 800,000 more by 2008 to fill the planned buildings.
Enlarge This Image
Kamran Jebreili/Associated Press
A computer rendering of Dubai Sports City, which will feature four stadiums, a championship-caliber golf course and an indoor ski resort.
Krekoski is a shaper, a groomer of golf courses, and the latest example of his well-compensated handiwork is beginning to bloom here in this Persian Gulf desert kingdom. Though perhaps difficult to imagine, two lakes will soon nestle among 18 landscaped holes on a championship-caliber golf course designed by Ernie Els. Sand trucked in from elsewhere in the United Arab Emirates will replace the too-fine sand of Dubai under the groomed grass of the fairways and in the bunkers. And to underlie the greens, Krekoski and his bosses at Troon Golf will turn to the red sand of Saudi Arabia.
The care and cost being shoveled into what will be known as the Dunes at Victory Heights are emblematic of not just the golf course and the villas and townhouses woven through the golf community, but of the entire complex being built here. Dubai Sports City — costing $2.5 billion and sprawling over 50 million square feet — aspires to be a bustling minimetropolis devoted to sports, a Xanadu for spectators and participants when it partly opens next year.
Four stadiums, ranging in size from a 10,000-seat multipurpose indoor arena to an outdoor stadium with room for more than 60,000, will play host to basketball, cricket, rugby, soccer and even ice hockey. An outdoor field hockey facility will hold 5,000 fans. A sports-themed shopping mall will connect the four indoor arenas, while hotels, condominiums, a promenade of high-end retail shops and boutiques, a health and fitness club and a sports medicine center will offer services and accommodations to residents and visitors.
The International Cricket Council, which recently moved its headquarters here from London, will open an academy in Dubai Sports City. So will the Manchester United soccer team, the Butch Harmon School of Golf and the David Lloyd Tennis Academy.
"Finally, a city within a city, powered by sports," said U. Balasubramaniam, the chief executive of Dubai Sports City.
In most places, such expansive — and expensive — plans would be unthinkable. But this is Dubai, the go-go business hub of the United Arab Emirates.
Dubai's unofficial motto is: the bigger and brasher, the better. Skyscraper after skyscraper line the Persian Gulf, with dozens more rapidly ascending into the brilliant blue sky. One, the Burj Dubai, promises to be the world's tallest, at more than 2,300 feet, although the builders will not divulge its exact height in case another country attempts to better them.
Luxury hotels abound — like the dhow-shaped Burj al Arab, where guests are anointed with oil and offered fruit when they enter the lavish lobby. And the huge shopping malls offer plenty of incongruous sights, like families enjoying Starbucks frappucinos while watching women in abayas ski down a synthetic slope.
"It's so much more cosmopolitan than anyone can imagine," said Mark Chapleski, an American who is the managing director in the Middle East for Troon Golf, the golf course management firm based in the United States that will run the Dunes at Victory Heights and oversees the Montgomerie golf club here.
This, after all, is a place where one Trader Vic's will not suffice, so revelers have a choice of two, including one in a faux Arab marketplace called Souk Madinat Jumeirah.
Major sporting events are not new to Dubai. The Dubai Tennis Championships, which made its debut in 1993, attracts many of the top players in the world, and the Dubai Desert Classic, a stop on the PGA European Tour, started in 1989. Horse racing has also enjoyed an international stage in the United Arab Emirates.
Dubai Sports City represents the latest attempt by Dubai's royal family to prepare for the day its oil reserves run out. And it is just a speck within the larger Dubailand area, where a theme park twice the size of Walt Disney World will arise. It will contain attractions like a dinosaur park, the Mall of Arabia, the Snowdome winter wonderland, which includes a revolving ski slope and iceberg-shaped hotel, and the Falcon City of Wonders (with replicas of the wonders of the world, like the pyramids and the Hanging Gardens of Babylon).
Turning the emirate into a sports and leisure destination is no different from any conglomerate's diversification efforts — except the normal rules of capitalism do not necessarily apply. "In Dubai, it's all Dubai P.L.C.," said Balasubramaniam, referring to the British corollary for Inc.
to be continued....
By LORNE MANLY
Published: May 9, 2006
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — In the middle of a stretch of desert, with little more than a few spindly trees for company, David Krekoski stepped out of his Caterpillar bulldozer to smoke a cigarette.
Dubai, with 1.4 million residents, will have to attract 800,000 more by 2008 to fill the planned buildings.
Enlarge This Image
Kamran Jebreili/Associated Press
A computer rendering of Dubai Sports City, which will feature four stadiums, a championship-caliber golf course and an indoor ski resort.
Krekoski is a shaper, a groomer of golf courses, and the latest example of his well-compensated handiwork is beginning to bloom here in this Persian Gulf desert kingdom. Though perhaps difficult to imagine, two lakes will soon nestle among 18 landscaped holes on a championship-caliber golf course designed by Ernie Els. Sand trucked in from elsewhere in the United Arab Emirates will replace the too-fine sand of Dubai under the groomed grass of the fairways and in the bunkers. And to underlie the greens, Krekoski and his bosses at Troon Golf will turn to the red sand of Saudi Arabia.
The care and cost being shoveled into what will be known as the Dunes at Victory Heights are emblematic of not just the golf course and the villas and townhouses woven through the golf community, but of the entire complex being built here. Dubai Sports City — costing $2.5 billion and sprawling over 50 million square feet — aspires to be a bustling minimetropolis devoted to sports, a Xanadu for spectators and participants when it partly opens next year.
Four stadiums, ranging in size from a 10,000-seat multipurpose indoor arena to an outdoor stadium with room for more than 60,000, will play host to basketball, cricket, rugby, soccer and even ice hockey. An outdoor field hockey facility will hold 5,000 fans. A sports-themed shopping mall will connect the four indoor arenas, while hotels, condominiums, a promenade of high-end retail shops and boutiques, a health and fitness club and a sports medicine center will offer services and accommodations to residents and visitors.
The International Cricket Council, which recently moved its headquarters here from London, will open an academy in Dubai Sports City. So will the Manchester United soccer team, the Butch Harmon School of Golf and the David Lloyd Tennis Academy.
"Finally, a city within a city, powered by sports," said U. Balasubramaniam, the chief executive of Dubai Sports City.
In most places, such expansive — and expensive — plans would be unthinkable. But this is Dubai, the go-go business hub of the United Arab Emirates.
Dubai's unofficial motto is: the bigger and brasher, the better. Skyscraper after skyscraper line the Persian Gulf, with dozens more rapidly ascending into the brilliant blue sky. One, the Burj Dubai, promises to be the world's tallest, at more than 2,300 feet, although the builders will not divulge its exact height in case another country attempts to better them.
Luxury hotels abound — like the dhow-shaped Burj al Arab, where guests are anointed with oil and offered fruit when they enter the lavish lobby. And the huge shopping malls offer plenty of incongruous sights, like families enjoying Starbucks frappucinos while watching women in abayas ski down a synthetic slope.
"It's so much more cosmopolitan than anyone can imagine," said Mark Chapleski, an American who is the managing director in the Middle East for Troon Golf, the golf course management firm based in the United States that will run the Dunes at Victory Heights and oversees the Montgomerie golf club here.
This, after all, is a place where one Trader Vic's will not suffice, so revelers have a choice of two, including one in a faux Arab marketplace called Souk Madinat Jumeirah.
Major sporting events are not new to Dubai. The Dubai Tennis Championships, which made its debut in 1993, attracts many of the top players in the world, and the Dubai Desert Classic, a stop on the PGA European Tour, started in 1989. Horse racing has also enjoyed an international stage in the United Arab Emirates.
Dubai Sports City represents the latest attempt by Dubai's royal family to prepare for the day its oil reserves run out. And it is just a speck within the larger Dubailand area, where a theme park twice the size of Walt Disney World will arise. It will contain attractions like a dinosaur park, the Mall of Arabia, the Snowdome winter wonderland, which includes a revolving ski slope and iceberg-shaped hotel, and the Falcon City of Wonders (with replicas of the wonders of the world, like the pyramids and the Hanging Gardens of Babylon).
Turning the emirate into a sports and leisure destination is no different from any conglomerate's diversification efforts — except the normal rules of capitalism do not necessarily apply. "In Dubai, it's all Dubai P.L.C.," said Balasubramaniam, referring to the British corollary for Inc.
to be continued....