Gulf News

Dubai Safari park set to open next year, top official says

MUNICIPALI­TY CONFIRMS DH1B WILDLIFE FACILITY IN AL WARQA’A IS 30% COMPLETE

- Staff Report

Dubai Safari, the longawaite­d upcoming zoo park, is 30 per cent complete and expected to open in the third quarter of 2016, an official said yesterday.

Hussain Lootah, Dubai Municipali­ty Director-General, said yesterday that the massive Dh1 billion project will cover 119 hectares.

Dubai Safari, coming up in Al Warqa’a area, will replace the existing decades-old Dubai Zoo.

The plan to relocate roughly 1,000 animals was developed and revised many times in the past decade, pushing back the opening of Dubai Safari.

The project was first announced in 2009 but work resumed in 2012 after a pause in the intervenin­g years.

The new wildlife attraction, developed by Dubai Municipali­ty, will come up opposite Dragon Mart. The municipali­ty is transformi­ng the site from a disused landfill for constructi­on waste into a tourist magnet.

Lootah said because of the park’s wide open location, solar energy will be used to generate electricit­y to run the irrigation system, official vehicles on site, and recreation­al facilities. The park will also recycle water and use treated water for irrigation.

The park’s site was the subject of an intensive study in the planning phase. Specialise­d technical committees were formed to select animals and distribute them to their allocated places according to the nature of the geographic­al distributi­on.

Dubai Safari aims to become a world standard for wildlife habitat.

Site was a landfill

The first phase of constructi­on took a long time to complete because the site used to be a landfill, so the municipali­ty had to first clean and level the site, Lootah said.

The inner roads, parking lots and infrastruc­ture facilities came in second, with irrigation, drainage, drinking water system, and fire extinguish­er networks built and completed.

There will be 3,600 parking spaces spread across 9.4 hectares, walkways for pedestrian­s and eco-friendly transport such as trams, bicycles and electrical vehicles.

The park has been designed to provide a variety of conditions to suit different animals, using modern interactiv­e methods in animal control and wildlife. They will be taken care of by specialist veterinari­ans inside the park.

Lootah said one feature setting the park apart from others is its open area that has been designed over 22 hectares. Visitors will be able to move among a variety of animals while riding air-conditione­d jeeps over an hour-long tour. This will give the guests a chance to come up close to the park’s animals and get to see how they react in their environmen­t.

Cave for nocturnal animals

Visitors will also be able to go through an exceptiona­l experience by visiting a dark cave designed to display nocturnal animals by using 3D techniques.

A safari trip on the back of an Asian elephant will also be available.

 ??  ??
 ?? Dubai Municipali­ty/Gulf News Archives ?? Shape of things to come An artist’s impression of Dubai Safari park. It will use solar energy to generate electricit­y to run the irrigation system, official vehicles on site and recreation­al facilities. There will be 3,600 parking spaces, walkways for...
Dubai Municipali­ty/Gulf News Archives Shape of things to come An artist’s impression of Dubai Safari park. It will use solar energy to generate electricit­y to run the irrigation system, official vehicles on site and recreation­al facilities. There will be 3,600 parking spaces, walkways for...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates