Troll Kingdom

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Palm Island

Mentalist

Administrator
Staff member
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14243983/


Palm Island


palm.jpg


ISS010-E-22273.jpg


DubaiPalmModel.jpg





"Sports City" It's 7.5 kilometres long. It has stadiums, arenas, and courses for football, soccer, basketball, cricket, golf, tennis, and many other sports.

Dubai20Sports20City.jpg


And Space Science World

Space20Science20World.jpg


Dubailand Ski Dome

6,000 tons of true snow and also will feature a "pinginarium" (aquarium for all 4 seasons)

Dubailand20Ski20Dome.jpg





DUBAI, United Arab Emirates - With 14,000 laborers toiling day and night, the first of Dubai’s three palm-shaped islands is finally about to get its first residents.

The Palm Jumeirah, a 12-square-mile island group, is part of what’s billed as the largest land-reclamation project in the world, the product of five years of brute hauling of millions of tons of Persian Gulf sand and quarried rock.

On Nov. 30, the palm will open to some 4,000 residents, said Issam Kazim, a spokesman for Dubai’s state-owned developer Nakheel.

When fully complete by 2010, the Palm Jumeirah will be an offshore city, with some 60,000 residents and at least 50,000 workers in 32 hotels and dozens of shops and attractions, Nakheel said.

Observers say they are surprised that the fledgling developer has been able to build such a complex project more or less as planned, albeit with several snags that delayed the opening from last year.

“The project has captured people’s imagination,” said Colin Foreman of the Middle East Economic Digest. “Nothing like it has been done anywhere else in the world.”

Nakheel’s four island projects, the world’s largest land reclamation effort, are reshaping Dubai’s stretch of the Gulf coast.

The $14 billion project is a key part of this booming city’s ambitions to rival Singapore and Hong Kong as a business hub, and surpass Las Vegas as a leisure capital.

The frenetic pace of development has utterly transformed Dubai from a sleepy trading and pearl-diving village in the 1950s to a flashy metropolis of 1.5 million.

The island’s construction has not all been smooth, and most buyers were supposed to get keys to their island homes a year ago.

That sinking feeling

Some of the new land sank and Nakheel needed an extra year to add more and pack it with vibrating land compactors, Kazim said.

Reports from those who have wandered through the island’s giant homes describe them as cheaply finished and set uncomfortably close to one another. Nakheel rejected an Associated Press request to visit the island.
Overburdened roads in Dubai’s Jumeirah Beach neighborhood are expected to clog further as people begin moving onto the island, accessible, for now, by a single bridge. Mainlanders have already put up with years of road works and innumerable trucks hauling boulders to the island.

Those moving onto the Palm Jumeirah this year will have to live with construction for another three years, and then an influx of tourists. Most of the owners are foreigners, with Britons making up the largest group, Kazim said.


I really need to be rich..
 
AMAZING THAT THERE'S A GROUP OF ISLANDS NATURALLY SHAPED LIKE THAt, ALMOST PROVES GOD LOL!

(Yeah, I know...)
 
Bet you coudln't bring it down with a single plane either.
 
Stupidity at it's finest.

Man made islands. located smack dab in the center of the Middle East, with some of the most unique structures and attractions on the face of the planet, visited and lived in by some of the most rich and powerful on the entire planet.

Yep, I bet terrorism NEVER touches it........
 
Well, to stop creating things and pushing the limits of what we can do because of terrorism would be insane. We might as well all return to living in caves if that is the case.
 
I wish I was sitting on a huge oil fortune and had hordes of underpaid immigrant laborers. :(
 
Mentalist said:
Well, to stop creating things and pushing the limits of what we can do because of terrorism would be insane. We might as well all return to living in caves if that is the case.

Well, there is common sense.

You don't plant lemon trees at the North Pole and you don't build trillion dollar luxury resorts in the middle of the terrorist mecca of the world.

It's just not good business.
 
But it's Dubai! It's the Las Vegas of international politics! It's where foreign policy takes off it's shirt and orders a Fuzzy Navel!
 
And there's going to be a huge forcefield around it.
 
As a Westerner, I'm jealous. Let's try to make nice things like Palm Island once again.
 
Seems a bit low lying, that's all I'd say. You wouldn't think it'd take a very big wave to go over that.

(Oh but it's VERY cool!)
 
The funniest thing about palm island is that they didn't design it for the tides. Right where all the footballers have bought their beachfront villas the effluent seems to linger. Funny how it's been attracted to that area.

Dubai has no appeal to me, engineering innovations do.
 
still, intriguing what human minds can dream up.
 
Be thankful that particular design for Freedom Tower is long gone. Ugh.

Ah thanks. I was wondering that because last I heard there had be no finalization. I'm not too keen on the design either.


It would be nice if they got their act together and actually started, I dunno, building something.

Got to say I'm definitley feeling the Shanghai World Finance Center. That thing looks awesome. Once that's built I'm going to make it a wish to get onto that observation deck at least once.
 
The daleks built the Empire State building, USING GAY SLAVE LABOUR.
 
Dubai is basically hedging their bets. They know that at some point, the oil is going to run out. So, they are investing cash now to make their little place in the sand a "Las Vegas" of the middle east.

I kind of like their "You don't like it, well, fuck you then. You are not invited" attitude they have about enviromentalists. I wish some of the western governments had that.
 
Back
Top