The National - News

The UAE’s internatio­nal foundation­s run deep

▶ Innovators from around the world helped build the country’s infrastruc­ture

-

When the late Dr Katsuhiko Takahashi – then a fresh-faced Japanese urban planning graduate – approached the Pan American Airlines ticket desk in New York after a call from the Japanese ambassador in Kuwait in 1967 to begin the Abu Dhabi adventure, he was asked if it was a town in the Caribbean. In one stunning year, he and Sheikh Zayed, the UAE’s Founding Father, began transformi­ng Abu Dhabi from a fishing village into a modern global city based on peace, progress, security and welfare. For the city’s wide roads, corniche and greenery, we have Dr Takahashi to thank. It was in that spirit that Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Co-operation, met Dr Takahashi’s children in Hiroshima this week, to honour Abu Dhabi’s first urban planner. Given this country’s startling growth in mere decades, there is a tendency to assume its cosmopolit­anism is new-found. But as Dr Takahashi’s story demonstrat­es, internatio­nal ties run far deeper. For centuries, Dubai and Abu Dhabi have been hubs of trade and understand­ing, where multiple worlds converged. Today that convergenc­e is written into their skylines.

Sheikh Zayed saw cities as organic, capable of expanding and changing naturally. It was a vision shared by Dr Takahashi and his Egyptian successor, Dr Abdulrahma­n Maklouf, whose Abu Dhabi masterplan gave the city its soul. Nonetheles­s, engaging in frank dialogue with dynamic planners is a testament to the magnanimit­y of Sheikh Zayed, who set a trend that lives on today. The magnificen­t Louvre Abu Dhabi was designed by French architect Jean Nouvel. Americans designed Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building, and the Emirates Palace hotel. But foreigners can also preserve. In 1989, British architect Rayner Otter led a successful campaign to save Dubai’s historic Bastakiya area – now known at Al Fahidi Historical Neighbourh­ood – which was earmarked for demolition. A long tradition of internatio­nal interchang­e will stand the UAE in good stead as it transition­s towards an inclusive and dynamic knowledge economy. Sheikh Abdullah’s trip honours an outsider who partook in this country’s miraculous developmen­t. Taking time to do so is necessary during the Year of Zayed, because the UAE’s building blocks transcend the bonds of nationalit­y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates