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Reconnecting Dubai

As global trends of urbanisation accelerate, there’s a need to connect increasingly dense urban centers.  To alleviate symptomatic congestion and deliver healthy, sustainable environments, cities should be human-centred and pedestrian-oriented, with a diverse mix of neighbourhoods and uses, easy access to modal transport and a vibrant public realm.

By clustering communities around high-quality public transport, transit-oriented development (TOD) can play a key role in promoting compact, livable, sustainable developments while providing quality amenities that are essential to health and well-being. This in turn can create synergy and opportunity to diversify development opportunities, linking working, living, shopping and recreation more intimately to deliver a more varied land value proposition and commercial return to shareholders.

A recent report by Knight Frank highlighted that residential property along key Red Line Metro routes has outperformed the wider residential market. Residential properties within a 10-minute walk command a 9% premium, and those within a 15-minute walk command a sizeable 32% premium over Dubai’s average residential property.

Parsons’ Urban Development Studio has been collaborating with Jumeirah Golf Estates and the RTA to master plan one of Dubai’s first TOD developments. We’ve transformed a landmark site along Dubai’s Mohamed Bin Zayed Road with future mobility networks into a livable, sustainable, high-density, mixed-use destination by promoting urban design principles that provide quality communities and public spaces:

The advantages of TOD are not limited to creating more walkable cities that are less reliant on cars. They also include promoting healthy city living while reducing pollution and energy use.

In planning future communities, developers and authorities can capitalise on Dubai’s capacity to work in partnership and secure capital investment quickly to implement sustainable projects. However, we should concentrate on the interface of individual projects that, when combined, can produce a single sustainable Dubai greater than the sum of its developments.

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