Gulf News

Jebel Ali gets Dubai’s second ‘Festival’ mall

THE 648,000 SQ FT FACILITY TARGETS 10,000 SHOPPERS A DAY INITIALLY

- BY MANOJ NAIR Associate Editor

The Al Futtaim Group has opened its second “Festival” branded mall in Dubai, at Jebel Ali, and anchored by the largest Ikea store in the UAE (at 35,500 square feet). In all, there will be 120 outlets at the “Festival Plaza”.

The Group also owns and operates Dubai Festival City, as well as another in Egypt.

Initial forecasts are for the mall to attract 10,000 visitors a day, with the numbers picking up as the residentia­l community being built next door — wasl Gate — gets delivered in phases. The first handover of homes at wasl Gate are scheduled from next week onwards.

Festival Plaza has an overall area of 648,000 square feet, and as is common in the mall industry these days, F&B options take up quite a significan­t portion.

More ‘festivals’ to come

Incidental­ly, the Festival Plaza is the second mall to have opened in Dubai in just over a fortnight’s time.

The Nakheel Mall on the Palm delivered 1.1 million square feet of new capacity to the city’s retail and entertainm­ent space.

There’s plenty more to come in the months ahead, at Dubai

Hills (by Emaar), Al Khail Avenue and Deira Islands Night Souk (both from Nakheel).

Having delivered the Dubai mall, the Al-Futtaim Group has confirmed plans to add more shopping destinatio­ns in the region… and even in the Far East. The announceme­nt could be made within “six months, and it will be in another country”, said Tim Earnest, who heads the Group’s mall division.

“It will be within a threehour flight from Dubai, and that’s all I can say at this moment,” he added. “And over the next 12-24 months, we will have given shape to our plans for new projects.”

The Group has a set formula to deliver on its mall developmen­t strategy — put the anchor stores led by an Ikea or an Ace Hardware in place and get the traffic coming in.

At Festival Plaza, on the first day of business, queues had formed to get into Ikea well ahead of the opening minute. (With wasl Gate itself having 257 townhouses and as many as 6,500 apartments eventually, shopper traffic to the Plaza is more or less a given. In recent years, community-themed malls have been stellar performers in the brick-and-mortar retail space.)

Open to acquisitio­ns

For its regional plans, AlFuttaim Group is open to acquiring an existing mall and then expand around it, Earnest added.

“We are actively evaluating different options - but it will depend on the market, that’s for certain.

“For instance, in Saudi Arabia, it’s better to go in for a new constructi­on, possibly with a smaller, speciality project.”

An entry into Abu Dhabi has been ruled out — “The city’s being adequately served by existing malls and new ones that are already being built. We see very little room to expand with the Festival brand there. At least for now.”

Earnest confirmed that the mall division had been “solicited” by mall owners in the UAE and outside to take on the management of their properties and improve the returns.

“But right now, we are better off concentrat­ing on our core business — building our own malls or acquiring them. A management role does not fit into our plans.”

 ?? Clint Egbert/Gulf News ?? Dubai’s second Festival mall opens in Jebel Ali yesterday. Festival Plaza has an overall area of 648,000 square feet, with F&B options taking up a significan­t portion of the area.
Clint Egbert/Gulf News Dubai’s second Festival mall opens in Jebel Ali yesterday. Festival Plaza has an overall area of 648,000 square feet, with F&B options taking up a significan­t portion of the area.
 ?? Clint Egbert/Gulf News ?? Dubai’s second Festival mall in Jebel Ali will have 120 outlets.
Clint Egbert/Gulf News Dubai’s second Festival mall in Jebel Ali will have 120 outlets.

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