ATTRACTION AND SITES
Captivating
Contrasts
From the timeless tranquillity of the desert to the lively bustle
of the souk, Dubai offers a kaleidoscope of attractions for visitors.
The emirate embraces a wide variety of scenery in a very small area.
In a single day, the tourist can experience everything from rugged
mountains and awe-inspiring sand dunes to sandy beaches and lush
green parks, from dusty villages to luxurious residential districts
and from ancient houses with windtowers to ultra-modern shopping
malls.
The emirate is both a dynamic international business centre and
a laid-back tourist escape; a city where the sophistication of the
21st century walks hand in hand with the simplicity of a bygone
era.
But these contrasts give Dubai its unique flavour and personality;
a cosmopolitan society with an international lifestyle, yet with
a culture deeply rooted in the Islamic traditions of Arabia.
Since earliest times, Dubai has been a meeting place, bringing together
the Bedouin of the desert interior with the pearl-diver, the merchant
of the city with the sea-going fisherman.
Dubai City
Having expanded along both banks of the Creek, Dubai’s central business
district is divided into two parts — Deira on the northern side
and Bur Dubai to the south — connected by a tunnel and two bridges.
Each has its share of fine mosques and busy souks, of public buildings,
shopping malls, hotels, office towers, banks, hospitals, schools,
apartments and villas.
Outside this core, the city extends to the neighbouring emirate
of Sharjah to the north, while extending south and west in a long
ribbon of development alongside the Gulf, through the districts
of Satwa, Jumeirah and Umm Suqeim.
At first glance, the city presents a predominantly modern face,
an ever-changing skyline of new developments, from striking glass
and concrete towers to gracious modern buildings incorporating traditional
Arabian architectural motifs and features.
The Creek
The Creek, a natural sea-water inlet which cuts through the centre
of the city, is the historic focal point of life in Dubai. A stroll
along its banks evokes the city’s centuries-old trading traditions.
Visitors will be captivated by the colour and bustle of the loading
and unloading of dhows which still ply ancient trade routes to places
as distant as India and East Africa.
An attractive way to view the Creek and the dhows is from an abra,
one of the small water taxis which criss-cross the Creek from the
souks of Deira to those on the Bur Dubai side.
Boatmen will also take visitors on a fascinating hour-long trip
from the abra embarkation points to the mouth of the Creek and inland
to the Maktoum Bridge, passing on the way many of the city’s historic
and modern landmarks.
Redevelopment work has transformed parts of the Creek’s banks. On
the Deira side, a broad and well-lit, paved promenade extends from
the Corniche, which faces on the Arabian Gulf, all the way to the
attractive purpose-built dhow terminal constructed beside Maktoum
Bridge.
On the Bur Dubai side between Maktoum and Garhoud bridges, Creekside
Park provides pleasant paved walks and extensive landscaped public
gardens.
At the inland end of the Creek is a large, shallow lagoon, now a
wildlife sanctuary which has become a haven for migrating shore
birds. Some 27,000 birds have been counted here at one time during
the autumn migration. The most spectacular are the many Greater
Flamingos which have made the Creek their permanent home. |