18 September 2007

Letter From Dubai

Letter from Dubai: Head-Over-Heels Race to the Future Causes Growing Pains

By Gordon Linden and Rupak Chatterjee

With sky-high aspirations to become a world-class destination and business hub, Dubai has mobilized mega-development on multiple fronts, leveraging its geographic advantages and historic trading role. The ambitions of this UAE city-state (population, 1.4 million) - expected to run out of oil in a few years - and its power to build seem unbounded. Massive manmade islands, Universal and Paramount theme parks, and Bawadi (a 50,000+ room Las Vegas-style strip) are all part of the current plans to solidify Dubai's growing reputation as the place to be.

Extraordinary architectural landmarks such as the Burj Al Arab Hotel, and the Burj Dubai Tower (world's tallest building - for now), stellar shopping malls, luxury hotels and sports venues are all expected to materialize in less time than it takes most cities to update a zoning ordinance. Much infrastructure is well underway, including Dubai World Central (world's largest airport), the Metro-rail network and an ever-expanding maze of roads and bridges.

The projects now taking shape and in the pipeline are ambitiously proposed to be fully populated in just a few short years. The skyline is crowded with building cranes and current residents face years of building noise, dust and truck traffic. Consider Dubai Marina, reportedly the world's largest man-made marina, which started development in the late 1990s. Today, in spite of glossy "sea-view-sky-lounge-living" brochures, it remains a vast construction site. In fact, very few of the unique, vigorously promoted destinations, such as Palm Island, Palm Deira, Dubai Waterfront, Dubailand, and the Lagoons (which, at 95 million square feet, is four times the size of London's Canary Wharf) are close to completion. Dubai should be busy moving earth and erecting buildings for at least another decade and probably beyond...

[click the title link to read the complete article at blooloop.com]

The Expo Book by Gordon Linden AIA

THE EXPO BOOK –

Gordon Linden & Paul Creighton’s New Guide To the Business, Organization & Design Of Modern World Expositions To Be Published by InPark Magazine

Milwaukee, USA, September 4, 2007 – InPark Magazine (IPM) announced that it will publish The Expo Book: A Guide to THE Hosting, Planning, Organization & Design OF WORLD EXPOSITIONS by Gordon Linden and Paul Creighton, in six consecutive installments of the bi-monthly magazine, starting with the Nov-Dec 2007 issue. Written by a pair of seasoned international expo consultants, THE EXPO BOOK addresses all aspects of the complex and rewarding business of creating an outstanding and successful world expo – from seeking registration with the Bureau of International Expositions, to selecting a site and formulating a theme, through all the subsequent planning, financial, operations and development issues including the transition to post-use of the site. The IPM serialization of THE EXPO BOOK will be the first publication of this new business & reference title. It will be edited by Judith Rubin.... [click on the title link to read the complete text of this release]