Business Traveller (Asia-Pacific)

Doha kicks off

Building on the momentum of its World Cup success, Qatar’s capital is scoring highly across transport, tourism and culture projects as it looks to net its long-term goals for economic diversific­ation

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The FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 will go down in history as far as football firsts are concerned. Not only did football legend Lionel Messi lift the World Cup for Argentina for the first time, but he also set the new FIFA World Cup appearance record at some 26 matches.

The tournament saw 172 goals scored and attracted 3.4 million stadium spectators (up from 3 million in 2018), while the final captivated some 1.5 billion global viewers according to FIFA, topped up with 6 billion social media engagement­s.

At that point in time, the eyes of the world were on Doha and its impressive 89,966-capacity Lusail Stadium – the largest stadium in the Middle East, and one of seven built for the tournament. They were part of a whopping US$229 billion investment pumped into World Cup preparatio­ns in the decade leading up to the largest sporting event on Earth.

This remarkable outlay also gets etched in the record books, with FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 not only marking the first World Cup to be staged in the Middle East, but also the most expensive, with the amount spent exceeding the cost of all other World Cups combined, according to a Skift Advisory report.

So, the question is, was it worth it?

What has Qatar, and more specifical­ly, its economic powerhouse, Doha, gained from this mammoth investment, and will the legacy match expectatio­ns?

Doha aims to triple 2019 tourist numbers and reach 7 million visitors a year by 2030

A national tourism vision

Staging the World Cup wasn’t a one-off boost, but part of a much larger master plan for long-term economic developmen­t. Like many of the Gulf States, Qatar has ambitions to rapidly diversify its nonenergy economy, and its Qatar National Vision 2030 (QNV 2030) sets out a road map to achieve this.

Goals have been set around four pillars – environmen­tal, human, economic and social developmen­t. They include establishi­ng Doha as a regional tourism hub by tripling

2019 tourist numbers to reach 7 million a year by 2030, and developing infrastruc­ture to improve the quality of life for residents and visitors alike.

World Cup-related infrastruc­ture ticked all these boxes, with significan­t investment in transport, including the Doha Metro (also due for further expansion) and tram service, the expansion of Hamad Internatio­nal Airport, and the constructi­on of a cruise terminal. More than 117,000 hotels rooms were made available for the tournament, and this growth continues, with 56,000 additional rooms to come online by 2025.

At the end of August 2023, Qatar had welcomed more than 2.5 million visitors, exceeding the full-year arrivals figures witnessed in 2022 and up 157 per cent compared with the same period the previous year, according to Qatar Tourism.

Hospitalit­y giant Accor says Qatar Tourism’s promotiona­l efforts, combined with the introducti­on of new infrastruc­ture and leisure attraction­s, have led to a “noticeable increase” in leisure and group travel to Doha.

“Efforts to showcase the destinatio­n and the addition of new recreation­al options have made Qatar more appealing to a wider audience,” confirms Paul Stevens, the group’s chief operating officer for the premium, midscale and economy division in the Middle East, Africa and Turkey. “This growing interest is especially evident among leisure travellers looking for diverse experience­s, and group segments attracted to the expanding array of attraction­s and events such the Deaf Internatio­nal Cricket Council World Cup, Asian Tennis Junior Championsh­ip, Qatar Internatio­nal Cup Grand Prix in Weightlift­ing and more.” Doha was on the traveller map pre-World Cup, he says, but the event “amplified awareness in new source markets”.

Accor’s premium, midscale and economy division played a role in delivering a successful World Cup, he adds, launching three properties in the run-up to the event – Pullman Doha West Bay, Adagio Doha and Ibis Doha C-ring. Adding another 464 keys to the mix are Swissôtel Corniche Park Towers Doha and Swissôtel Residences Corniche Park Towers Doha, both opening soon in West Bay, with the latter meeting pent-up demand for extended-stay options.

Qatar Airways plans to grow its destinatio­n count to more than 255 from the current 170

Stadiums reinvented

Anyone who watched the World Cup will have been impressed by the seven new stadiums built for the tournament (the eighth, Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium existed before the event). Now deemed global architectu­ral icons, each is being used or repurposed under the Qatar Supreme Committee legacy plan.

The World Cup might be over, but Qatar remains a growing sports hub, and most of the stadiums will be used for other events, including the AFC Asian Cup Qatar 2024, which ran for a month at the beginning of the year.

The Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium continues to be the home of Qatar’s national team and hosts other large sporting events, while Stadium 974, built from 974

HOT HOTELS New Doha properties worth checking out – and checking into Andaz Doha

Launching later this year, Andaz Doha is a lifestyle hotel located in West Bay, one of the city’s major arts hubs. Close to most embassies, financial institutio­ns and luxury shopping malls, it looks set to be a foodie hotspot, with signature restaurant­s including Salt Road, a venue showcasing South African cuisine with a salty edge; Mr & Mrs Hawker, serving Singaporea­n street food; and Mumble Jungle, an Afro-Cuban inspired bar. There will be 256 rooms, 36 suites and for longer stays, 56 residences, plus a spa, fitness centre, pool and meeting facilities. Pets are welcome, too. hyatt.com

Rixos Qetaifan Island Doha

Arguably one of Doha’s most anticipate­d hotels, the Rixos Qetaifan Island North Doha is now open. Aside from playing host to the Meryal waterpark with 21 rides and the highest water slide in the world at 80m, true to the Rixos brand, the 345-room property will be a hub for entertainm­ent, home to a souq (market), beach club, spa and fitness concept, plus a tasty gastronomi­c offering including a steakhouse and French brasserie. rixos.com

Waldorf Astoria Doha West Bay

Hot on the heels of the Waldorf Astoria Lusail opening its doors in November 2022, just in time for the World Cup, the Hilton brand’s second property opened this January, but this time in the heart of Doha’s diplomatic area in West

Bay. Housed in a 44-storey tower, the 283 rooms and suites are Art Deco inspired, while Peacock Alley of Waldorf Astoria New York fame is immortalis­ed, serving signature dishes such as red velvet cake and eggs Benedict. For more bites of the Big Apple in Doha, there’s a New York-inspired mixology bar and Tribeca Market, a gourmet food emporium. A four-floor wellness sanctuary includes a fitness centre, swimming pools and a spa. hilton.com

Riviera Rayhaan by Rotana Doha

Also opening soon, this four-star property, just 20 minutes from Hamad Internatio­nal Airport and close to Doha’s key business districts and major tourism attraction­s, will offer 185 rooms and suites; four dining venues, including Mediterran­ean restaurant Salvia; Rotana’s signature Bodylines Fitness and Wellness Club with gym, spa and rooftop pool; and three meeting rooms for up to 100 guests. Convenient­ly, Bin Mahmoud station on the new Doha Metro system is a two-minute walk away. rotana.com

shipping containers, is being dismantled and will be sent to a new location overseas.

Lusail and Al Bayt stadiums are being repurposed into community hubs. A sports medicine hospital is being built on part of the Al Bayt Stadium, which will retain its traditiona­l Qatari tent design, and

Lusail Stadium remains a focal point of the mega Lusail City developmen­t, which will include 22 hotels, golf courses and an amusement park when complete. It also includes the Lusail Boulevard business hub with integrated commercial components and the iconic sword-shaped Lusail Towers, which houses the Raffles and Fairmont hotels. Lusail City was recently designated the “Capital of Islamic Culture” for 2030 at an Islamic world conference, recognisin­g its status as a “historical cultural beacon”.

Constructi­on picks up

The constructi­on sector is also on track to grow 9.5 per cent between 2023 and 2030, according to Turner & Townsend’s Qatar Market Intelligen­ce Autumn Q3 2023.

The government’s QNV 2030 targets for transport and culture are driving this growth, it says, bolstered by multiple strategies including the 2050 Transport Plan.

The initiative encompasse­s the developmen­t of a long-distance and national rail network, which alongside the aforementi­oned Doha Metro, will form the backbone of a robust public transport network, supported by secondary systems ranging from automated people movers to water taxi services.

Ramping up Hamad Internatio­nal Airport’s role as a regional aviation hub is another focus, and the goal is to boost capacity from the current 53 million to 70 million passengers annually. This will help facilitate the expansion ambitions of national carrier Qatar Airways, which plans to grow its destinatio­n count to more than 255 from the current 170. Alongside this, a new cargo terminal capable of handling

3.2 million tonnes per year is also under constructi­on.

Aligned with QNV 2030,

Doha will also witness a notable surge in sustainabl­e constructi­on initiative­s over the next few years, incorporat­ing cutting-edge technologi­es designed to minimise environmen­tal harm, Turner & Townsend’s report notes. Public sector organisati­ons are setting the example it says, using digitalisa­tion to develop a green building industry.

Contempora­ry art museum, the Art Mill by Elemental, will be twice the size of the Tate Modern

The destinatio­n offering

Doha remains a hotbed of hotel developmen­t too, with more than 13,841 rooms across 49 hotel projects currently under constructi­on, according to Smith

Travel Research. Many will be located in new destinatio­ns under constructi­on including the West Bay North Beach Project, a landmark developmen­t in Doha, featuring more than 12 beaches, plus restaurant­s, cafes, playground­s and sports facilities. It aims to create a landmark tourist destinatio­n, connecting

West Bay to the Corniche waterfront. Others include Al Maha Island, an entertainm­ent hub with attraction­s such as Lusail Winter Wonderland and a high-end dining district

that’s home to Zuma and Nammos Beach Club, among others. There’s also Qetaifan Island, where Qatar’s largest water park will open soon. Meryal Waterpark, featuring the world’s highest water slide, is part of the hotly anticipate­d Rixos Qetaifan Island North Doha.

Qatar’s culture sector, integral to its national identity, continues to be enhanced and diversifie­d, with infrastruc­ture plans ranging from museum developmen­t and preserving UNESCO heritage sites, to building creative incubators that will host internatio­nal talent, all of which is likely to leave a legacy that lasts for much longer than a month-long festival of football.

The city is already renowned globally for its Museum of Islamic Art and the National Museum of Qatar, both prominent heritage landmarks that reflect the nation’s rich history and cultural evolution, and several new institutio­ns are planned.

They include the Lusail Museum by Herzog & de Meuron, showcasing Orientalis­t art; the Qatar Auto Museum by OMA, dedicated to cars; and the Art Mill by Elemental, a museum of modern and contempora­ry art around twice the size of London’s Tate Modern. This trifecta will cement Doha’s position as a hub for arts, innovation and cultural exchange.

So too will the capital’s flourishin­g cultural events scene, which grows every year and includes festivals for food, films, fishing, books, kids and even beauty pageants for animals. Perhaps the best known is the Doha Cultural Festival held in March, celebratin­g Qatar’s heritage and culture with poetry readings, dance performanc­es and more.

New on the agenda and a coup for Qatar, is Expo 2023 Doha, a six-month event making history as the first A1 internatio­nal horticultu­ral exhibition staged in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region.

Developed under QNV 2030, the sixmonth-long event, which runs until the end of March this year and coincided with COP28 in Dubai in December, is themed “Green Desert, Better Environmen­t”, and aims to promote sustainabl­e innovation­s and combat desertific­ation. It is being staged at the 1.7 million sqm Al Bidda Park, and 3 million visitors are anticipate­d.

In with a sporting chance

Major sports events remain firmly on Qatar’s radar and it hopes the World Cup, which proved the Gulf State is capable of staging a huge world-class event, will be a springboar­d for hosting the biggest sporting event of all – the 2036 Summer Olympics.

Earlier bids for this event have failed, with the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) doubting Qatar’s capability to host 10,500 athletes across 32 sports along with millions of spectators, but its World Cup success and continued investment in infrastruc­ture may now boost its chances.

In the meantime, Doha will continue to notch up other global sports events, ranging from the opening race of the World Endurance Championsh­ip in 2024 and the World Table Tennis Championsh­ips in 2025 to the Asian Games in 2030, while the F1 Grand Prix is now an annual fixture.

Of course, its neighbour, Saudi Arabia, is now a major contender for major sports events too, but with a World Cup in its pocket, Doha is certainly in the running.

With brand perception­s of the destinatio­n enhanced after the event – 35 per cent of respondent­s to the Skift survey said their sentiment towards the country had improved following the football tournament, while 35 per cent said they were more willing to travel there – spectators won’t be in short supply.

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 ?? ?? BELOW AND RIGHT: National Museum of Qatar; Hamad Internatio­nal Airport
BELOW AND RIGHT: National Museum of Qatar; Hamad Internatio­nal Airport
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 ?? ?? FROM OPPOSITE PAGE: Lusail Stadium; Doha’s metro serves 37 stations over 37km; flags advertisin­g the Expo 2023 event
FROM OPPOSITE PAGE: Lusail Stadium; Doha’s metro serves 37 stations over 37km; flags advertisin­g the Expo 2023 event

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