• The Mirror Line, Neom, Saudi Arabia. Photo: Neom
    The Mirror Line, Neom, Saudi Arabia. Photo: Neom
  • New Administrative Capital, Cairo, Egypt. Photo: Dar Al-Handasah
    New Administrative Capital, Cairo, Egypt. Photo: Dar Al-Handasah
  • Telosa, USA. Photo: Telosa
    Telosa, USA. Photo: Telosa
  • Akon City, Senegal. Photo: Akon City
    Akon City, Senegal. Photo: Akon City
  • Net City, China. Photo: NBBJ
    Net City, China. Photo: NBBJ
  • BiodiverCity, Malaysia. Photo: BIG
    BiodiverCity, Malaysia. Photo: BIG
  • Amaravati, India. Photo: Foster + Partners
    Amaravati, India. Photo: Foster + Partners
  • Liberland Metaverse, the metaverse. Photo: Zaha Hadid
    Liberland Metaverse, the metaverse. Photo: Zaha Hadid
  • Floating City, Maldives. Photo: Maldives Floating City
    Floating City, Maldives. Photo: Maldives Floating City
  • Chengdu Future City, China. Photo: OMA
    Chengdu Future City, China. Photo: OMA
  • Nusantara, Indonesia. Photo: Urbanplus
    Nusantara, Indonesia. Photo: Urbanplus
  • Woven City, Japan. Photo: Woven City
    Woven City, Japan. Photo: Woven City

12 futuristic cities being built around the world, from Saudi Arabia to China


Maan Jalal
  • English
  • Arabic

As the world changes, so must our cities.

With the global population continuing to increase and climate change drastically affecting our environment, many metropolises are struggling to grow, develop and even support citizens within current and traditional urban designs.

Governments, entrepreneurs and technology companies are employing some of the world’s leading architects and designers to rethink the idea of cities, as well as how people interact and live within them.

From reclaimed land, groundbreaking skyscrapers in the desert and metropolises rising in the metaverse, here are 12 incredible futuristic cities redefining the urban spaces we live in.

The Line, Saudi Arabia

  • The Line is one of the 10 districts of Saudi Arabia's megaproject Neom, envisioned as the world's largest city at a site in the north-west of the kingdom. Photo: Neom
    The Line is one of the 10 districts of Saudi Arabia's megaproject Neom, envisioned as the world's largest city at a site in the north-west of the kingdom. Photo: Neom
  • Plans for The Line show a vertical city encased in mirrored walls, which extends from the Red Sea into the desert.
    Plans for The Line show a vertical city encased in mirrored walls, which extends from the Red Sea into the desert.
  • Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said The Line will "embody how urban communities will be in the future". Photo: Spa
    Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said The Line will "embody how urban communities will be in the future". Photo: Spa
  • The plan is for the city to be 170 kilometres long and 500 metres tall. Photo: Neom
    The plan is for the city to be 170 kilometres long and 500 metres tall. Photo: Neom
  • The Line envisions urban living without any cars or roads. Photo: Spa
    The Line envisions urban living without any cars or roads. Photo: Spa
  • “The Line will be the first city in the world to be powered by renewable energy including wind, solar and hydrogen,” Giles Pendleton, executive director of development at The Line in Neom, told 'The National' in August.
    “The Line will be the first city in the world to be powered by renewable energy including wind, solar and hydrogen,” Giles Pendleton, executive director of development at The Line in Neom, told 'The National' in August.
  • A rendering shows man-made waterfalls inside The Line. Photo: Spa
    A rendering shows man-made waterfalls inside The Line. Photo: Spa
  • The aim is to eventually accommodate nine million people. Photo: Spa
    The aim is to eventually accommodate nine million people. Photo: Spa
  • All amenities would be available within a five-minute walk, officials say. Photo: Spa
    All amenities would be available within a five-minute walk, officials say. Photo: Spa
  • A rendering shows boats entering The Line. Photo: Spa
    A rendering shows boats entering The Line. Photo: Spa
  • A port at The Line. Photo: Spa
    A port at The Line. Photo: Spa
  • The lush city will have green spaces and rooftop gardens. Photo: Spa
    The lush city will have green spaces and rooftop gardens. Photo: Spa
  • There will be high-speed rail, with an end-to-end transit of 20 minutes. Photo: Spa
    There will be high-speed rail, with an end-to-end transit of 20 minutes. Photo: Spa
  • The Line will be built in the north-western region of Saudi Arabia. Photo: Spa
    The Line will be built in the north-western region of Saudi Arabia. Photo: Spa
  • The city aims to run on 100 per cent renewable energy. Photo: Spa
    The city aims to run on 100 per cent renewable energy. Photo: Spa
  • The plan shows that 95 per cent of the land will be preserved for nature. Photo: Spa
    The plan shows that 95 per cent of the land will be preserved for nature. Photo: Spa

Designers: Morphosis Architects

The $500 billion Neom project in Saudi Arabia is set to be home to a record-setting 170-kilometre-long skyscraper called The Line.

It will be the world’s largest structure, comprising two buildings up to 490 metres tall, running parallel to each other. The structures will be connected by walkways and a high-speed transport system, which will connect one end of the city to the other in 20 minutes.

Designed by the US-based Morphosis Architects, The Line promises to be walkable city, with no cars and zero carbon emissions.

BiodiverCity, Malaysia

BiodiverCity, Malaysia. Photo: BIG
BiodiverCity, Malaysia. Photo: BIG

Designers: Bjarke Ingels Group

BiodiverCity is a planned sustainable city made of three artificial islands built off the shore of Penang Island in Malaysia.

A place where people and nature co-exist BiodiverCity and its lily pad-shaped islands will be home to between 15,000 and 18,000 residents. Structures will be built using natural materials such as timber, bamboo and concrete created from recycled materials.

The city is also planned to be a global travel destination, with 4.6km of public beaches and 242 hectares of parks and a 25km waterfront. BiodiverCity will also be a car-free environment, where pedestrians can use the planned autonomous water, air and land public transportation network.

Chengdu Future City, China

Chengdu Future City, China. Photo: OMA
Chengdu Future City, China. Photo: OMA

Designers: OMA

China’s planned Chengdu Future City is challenging conventions of urban planning by proposing a master plan not based on traditional, car-orientated road networks.

Its six distinct zones will be connected though a smart mobility network using automated vehicles. The zones will also be pedestrian-friendly and within a 10-minute walk of each other.

The 4.6-square-kilometre site will also have an international education park where buildings, including a university, will have landscaped terraces, designed to be an extension of the natural landscape.

Akon City, Senegal

Akon City, Senegal. Photo: Akon City
Akon City, Senegal. Photo: Akon City

Designers: Bakri & Associates Development Consultants

Akon City is a planned 809-hectare futuristic city that will be located along the Atlantic coast, 100 kilometres south of Dakar.

Conceived and launched by singer and entrepreneur Akon, the smart city will be eco-friendly and powered by renewable energy. Described by Akon as a “real-life Wakanda”, a reference to the film Black Panther that inspired him, Akon City is set to have large skyscrapers, shopping malls, parks, universities, a stadium and a technology hub.

Akon City’s goal is to stimulate the local economy and create jobs while using the latest technologies of blockchain and cryptocurrency.

Telosa, the US

Telosa, US. Photo: Telosa
Telosa, US. Photo: Telosa

Designers: Bjarke Ingels

Announced in September 2021, Telosa is a proposed city conceived by billionaire Marc Lore, to be built somewhere in the US western desert.

With a planned population of five million people by 2050, Telosa will be a “15-minute city” where all amenities, such as schools, workplaces, and goods and service providers, will be a 15-minute commute from residents' homes.

Lore hopes Telosa will be the most sustainable city in the world where no vehicles powered by fossil fuels will be permitted. His vision also includes a reformed version of capitalism where wealth is created in a fair way, keeping residents’ quality of life as a priority.

Woven City, Japan

Woven City, Japan. Photo: Woven City
Woven City, Japan. Photo: Woven City

Designers: Bjarke Ingels Group

Toyota, the world's largest car maker, has already started construction on a 70-hectare smart city at the base of Mount Fuji in Japan.

Woven City will be one of the world’s first smart cities: a fully autonomous community designed to test new technologies such as automated driving, robotics and artificial intelligence in a real-world environment.

The city will be fully sustainable, powered by hydrogen fuel cells where pedestrian streets will intersect with those dedicated to self-driving cars. Wood will be the primary material for building to reduce carbon footprint and rooftops will be covered in photovoltaic panels to generate solar power.

It will have a starting population of 360 residents, with plans to grow the number over the coming years. Initially they will be inventors, senior citizens and young families who will test and develop smart technologies.

New Administrative Capital, Egypt

New Administrative Capital, Egypt. Photo: Dar Al-Handasah
New Administrative Capital, Egypt. Photo: Dar Al-Handasah

Designers: Skidmore, Owings & Merrill

The development is part of a larger initiative for Egypt’s 2030 Vision. The yet-to-be-named new capital city, 45 kilometres east of Cairo, will house up to seven million people.

The privately funded project will cover 700 square kilometres and will include 46 districts, 1,250 mosques and churches, solar energy farms and one of the world's largest urban parks.

The Cairo Light Rail Transit, inaugurated last month, will connect Cairo to the New Administrative Capital. One of the main drivers for the construction was to ease congestion in Cairo, which has a population of more than 10 million and is continuing to grow.

Liberland Metaverse, the metaverse

Liberland Metaverse by Zaha Hadid Architects. Photo: Metaverse
Liberland Metaverse by Zaha Hadid Architects. Photo: Metaverse

Designers: Zaha Hadid Architects

As the metaverse continues to inform how we could interact and occupy the digital realm, it’s also challenging how we view the idea of cities and nations.

Zaha Hadid Architects, in collaboration with the micronation of Liberland and ArchAgenda, is creating a "cyber-urban" city in the metaverse named Liberland Metaverse.

The completely virtual city is based on the Free Republic of Liberland — a micronation claimed by Czech politician Vit Jedlicka, which exists in the disputed land between Croatia and Serbia.

Liberland Metaverse will act as a virtual industry synergy and networking hub for crypto projects, crypto companies and crypto events. People will be able to buy plots of land with cryptocurrency and enter digital buildings as avatars.

Floating City, the Maldives

  • The design of Maldives Floating City is inspired by brain coral, a type of marine organism resembling the human brain. All photos: Waterstudio/Dutch Docklands Maldives
    The design of Maldives Floating City is inspired by brain coral, a type of marine organism resembling the human brain. All photos: Waterstudio/Dutch Docklands Maldives
  • Each residence will measure 100 square metres and have its own jetty and roof terrace.
    Each residence will measure 100 square metres and have its own jetty and roof terrace.
  • Up to 20,000 people will live in the floating city.
    Up to 20,000 people will live in the floating city.
  • Maldives Floating City will be a car-free zone.
    Maldives Floating City will be a car-free zone.

Designers: Waterstudio

One of the first floating cities in the world is being built in the Maldives in response to rising sea levels. With climate change a threat to many cities around the world, 80 per cent of the Maldives is expected to be uninhabitable by 2050.

Maldives Floating City is currently being designed to house 20,000 people as soon as 2024.

The development will be climate resistant and will work with rising sea levels. The eco-friendly project will include 5,000 low-rise floating homes built on hexagonal structures that will rise with the sea.

Amaravati, India

Amaravati, India. Photo: Foster + Partners
Amaravati, India. Photo: Foster + Partners

Designers: Foster + Partners

The city of Amaravati will be the new administrative capital of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh in south-eastern India.

Situated on the banks of the River Krishna, Amaravati’s structure will be defined by a strong urban grid inspired by Lutyens’ Delhi, an area in New Delhi named after the British architect Sir Edwin Lutyens, and Central Park in New York.

Greenery and water will make up at least 60 per cent of the city with the aim of making Amaravati one of the most sustainable in the world, complete with the latest technologies such as the conversion of light into electricity through the use of photovoltaics.

The transportation will include electric vehicles, water taxis and dedicated cycle routes with numerous pedestrian-friendly routes such as shaded streets and squares.

Nusantara, Indonesia

Nusantara, Indonesia. Photo: Urbanplus
Nusantara, Indonesia. Photo: Urbanplus

Designers: Urban + practice

Indonesia plans to move its capital Jakarta to East Kalimantan, between North Penajam Paser and Kutai Kartanegara on the Indonesian part of Borneo island.

Nusantara, the new capital, is planned to be a sustainable city where high-rise structures will utilise 100 per cent eco-friendly construction and use entirely renewable energy. However, environmental groups have been vocal about how Nusantara’s construction could cause damage to one of the world’s oldest rainforests.

The cost of moving the capital is estimated at $35 billion and is seen as a necessary step for Indonesia’s future. Building Nusantara will help with the economic growth of the country and ease pressure on Jakarta, which suffers from continuous traffic jams and issues with pollution owing to a population of more than 10 million.

Net City, China

Net City, China. Photo: NBBJ
Net City, China. Photo: NBBJ

Designers: NBBJ Design Firm

China’s answer to Google, technology firm Tencent is building a city. The 22-million-square-foot urban development named Net City will be built on reclaimed land and will be designed to accommodate a population of 80,000.

The planned layout of Net City is designed to reduce traffic by including roads for buses, bikes and automated vehicles.

The development is planned to be sustainable with rooftop solar panels and advanced technological systems for reusing wastewater.

10 architectural marvels from around the world — in pictures

  • Metropol Parasol by J Mayer H Architects in Seville, Spain. Getty Images
    Metropol Parasol by J Mayer H Architects in Seville, Spain. Getty Images
  • Harpa Concert Hall in Reykjavik, Iceland. Getty Images
    Harpa Concert Hall in Reykjavik, Iceland. Getty Images
  • Gardens by the Bay in Singapore was created in 2012 on reclaimed land adjacent to the city's central business. Getty Images
    Gardens by the Bay in Singapore was created in 2012 on reclaimed land adjacent to the city's central business. Getty Images
  • Linked Hybrid apartment complex in Beijing. Photo: Steven Holl Architects
    Linked Hybrid apartment complex in Beijing. Photo: Steven Holl Architects
  • The entrance to the sleek and modern Perot Museum of Nature and Science in Dallas, Texas. Getty Images
    The entrance to the sleek and modern Perot Museum of Nature and Science in Dallas, Texas. Getty Images
  • Absolute World complex and Burnhamthorpe Road view in Mississauga, Canada. Getty Images
    Absolute World complex and Burnhamthorpe Road view in Mississauga, Canada. Getty Images
  • The National Museum of Qatar, Doha. AFP
    The National Museum of Qatar, Doha. AFP
  • Guangzhou Opera House in China. Getty Images
    Guangzhou Opera House in China. Getty Images
  • Louvre Abu Dhabi on Saadiyat Island. Chris Whiteoak / The National
    Louvre Abu Dhabi on Saadiyat Island. Chris Whiteoak / The National
  • Burj Khalifa in Dubai. Pawan Singh / The National
    Burj Khalifa in Dubai. Pawan Singh / The National
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Real estate tokenisation project

Dubai launched the pilot phase of its real estate tokenisation project last month.

The initiative focuses on converting real estate assets into digital tokens recorded on blockchain technology and helps in streamlining the process of buying, selling and investing, the Dubai Land Department said.

Dubai’s real estate tokenisation market is projected to reach Dh60 billion ($16.33 billion) by 2033, representing 7 per cent of the emirate’s total property transactions, according to the DLD.

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The specs

Engine: 2.0-litre 4cyl turbo

Power: 261hp at 5,500rpm

Torque: 405Nm at 1,750-3,500rpm

Transmission: 9-speed auto

Fuel consumption: 6.9L/100km

On sale: Now

Price: From Dh117,059

The finalists

Player of the Century, 2001-2020: Cristiano Ronaldo (Juventus), Lionel Messi (Barcelona), Mohamed Salah (Liverpool), Ronaldinho

Coach of the Century, 2001-2020: Pep Guardiola (Manchester City), Jose Mourinho (Tottenham Hotspur), Zinedine Zidane (Real Madrid), Sir Alex Ferguson

Club of the Century, 2001-2020: Al Ahly (Egypt), Bayern Munich (Germany), Barcelona (Spain), Real Madrid (Spain)

Player of the Year: Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, Robert Lewandowski (Bayern Munich)

Club of the Year: Bayern Munich, Liverpool, Real Madrid

Coach of the Year: Gian Piero Gasperini (Atalanta), Hans-Dieter Flick (Bayern Munich), Jurgen Klopp (Liverpool)

Agent of the Century, 2001-2020: Giovanni Branchini, Jorge Mendes, Mino Raiola

How to play the stock market recovery in 2021?

If you are looking to build your long-term wealth in 2021 and beyond, the stock market is still the best place to do it as equities powered on despite the pandemic.

Investing in individual stocks is not for everyone and most private investors should stick to mutual funds and ETFs, but there are some thrilling opportunities for those who understand the risks.

Peter Garnry, head of equity strategy at Saxo Bank, says the 20 best-performing US and European stocks have delivered an average return year-to-date of 148 per cent, measured in local currency terms.

Online marketplace Etsy was the best performer with a return of 330.6 per cent, followed by communications software company Sinch (315.4 per cent), online supermarket HelloFresh (232.8 per cent) and fuel cells specialist NEL (191.7 per cent).

Mr Garnry says digital companies benefited from the lockdown, while green energy firms flew as efforts to combat climate change were ramped up, helped in part by the European Union’s green deal. 

Electric car company Tesla would be on the list if it had been part of the S&P 500 Index, but it only joined on December 21. “Tesla has become one of the most valuable companies in the world this year as demand for electric vehicles has grown dramatically,” Mr Garnry says.

By contrast, the 20 worst-performing European stocks fell 54 per cent on average, with European banks hit by the economic fallout from the pandemic, while cruise liners and airline stocks suffered due to travel restrictions.

As demand for energy fell, the oil and gas industry had a tough year, too.

Mr Garnry says the biggest story this year was the “absolute crunch” in so-called value stocks, companies that trade at low valuations compared to their earnings and growth potential.

He says they are “heavily tilted towards financials, miners, energy, utilities and industrials, which have all been hit hard by the Covid-19 pandemic”. “The last year saw these cheap stocks become cheaper and expensive stocks have become more expensive.” 

This has triggered excited talk about the “great value rotation” but Mr Garnry remains sceptical. “We need to see a breakout of interest rates combined with higher inflation before we join the crowd.”

Always remember that past performance is not a guarantee of future returns. Last year’s winners often turn out to be this year’s losers, and vice-versa.

Roll of honour 2019-2020

Dubai Rugby Sevens
Winners: Dubai Hurricanes
Runners up: Bahrain

West Asia Premiership
Winners: Bahrain
Runners up: UAE Premiership

UAE Premiership
}Winners: Dubai Exiles
Runners up: Dubai Hurricanes

UAE Division One
Winners: Abu Dhabi Saracens
Runners up: Dubai Hurricanes II

UAE Division Two
Winners: Barrelhouse
Runners up: RAK Rugby

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MOUNTAINHEAD REVIEW

Starring: Ramy Youssef, Steve Carell, Jason Schwartzman

Director: Jesse Armstrong

Rating: 3.5/5

Updated: August 26, 2022, 8:55 AM