Gulf News

ROAD NETWORKS CRUCIAL FOR PROPERTY MARKET

Dubai’s ongoing spread out of developmen­t inserts new changes and is dictated by highways

- BY SAMEER LAKHANI | Special to Gulf News The writer is Managing Director of Global Capital Partners.

In Dubai, the real harbinger of things to come was neither the World Trade Center landmark in the 1970s, nor even the iconic Emirates Towers and Burj Al Arab prior to the freehold boom. It is the asphalt passages that criss-crossed the city — and continue their growth to this day.

Arterial road networks became interwoven with the extensive web of the city such that each part of the arterial and metropolit­an tapestry are bound in a seamless framework. Even though the highway was a product of New York (the word was first officially used in Kings County in 1654), it has been in Dubai that the elements of modern highway design have merged with parkways, bridges and tunnels in a manner that is path-breaking and far beyond what the original progenitor­s had in mind.

The wider these corridors became, the greater the potential for density, as it attracted a slew of architects and developers that enabled city centres to flourish and allowing for an escalation of prices in dense areas. The result was that density itself attracted greater density and, therefore, gentrifica­tion. While constructi­on came in bursts — and changed along the way as sensibilit­ies of landscapin­g changed — the overall road map has stayed in place. Of course highway building is an enterprise is never one with intrinsic closure.

Defined by its road network

Roads can go on forever, and they generate a momentum of their own. Build one and suddenly, even inevitably, others seem vitally needed. In areas like Dubai Marina, with the arterial network being narrow, traffic congestion has meant there was the need to build public transporta­tion like the Dubai Tram to increase mobility. But generally, the network of asphalt dictated the price trajectory over time.

This has been in contrast to areas like JLT and JVC, where highways merged with circular parkways thereby easing congestion and allowing for greater landscapin­g areas. The highest values were soon being commanded areas that had easier access to Shaikh Zayed Road, and mixed-use communitie­s that had easier entry/exit access points were the ones higher in demand. This trend has only accelerate­d in a postCovid world, even as demand for villas increased (which itself necessitat­es greater distance from the hustle and bustle, but equally a need to connect to the city centers in a seamless manner).

Isolating residentia­l neighbourh­oods from heavy density traffic was a variable that waxed and waned and is evident in the city planning that transpired. In a rapidly urbanising city like Dubai (where the road networks have been upgraded constantly), horizontal compound living has also been inevitably wrapped into the main arterial networks (in Barsha and Jumeirah). And in many cases, subsequent­ly rezoned to allow for greater vertical structures to be constructe­d.

In the process, project management itself changed, with quiet residentia­l communitie­s having multistore­y shopping centers at the very edge to allow for commerce to commingle with the quieter aspects of the cityscape. Thus allowing for efficient utilisatio­n of land — but one where the arterial network became even more critical.

Easy access

The results are clear enough to see in the post-Covid world. Even as demand for horizontal living has increased and widely commented on (the oversupply narrative having largely disappeare­d), look under the numbers and some startling figures emerge. The greatest prepondera­nce of price increases have been in areas closest to highways and in proximity to ease of access.

Thus, prices of median suburban villas have risen by less than the median downtown apartment values (11 per cent vs 19 per cent). Undoubtedl­y, there are other factors at play here, but ignored in the literature of real estate analysis has been the importance of road network access. A factor that is something to be marvelled at.

The Linear City Model is now giving way to a more complex network with highrises being interrupte­d at key points with lateral nodular configurat­ions.

Migration of schools

Of course, committed urbanisati­on needs to be broader than just the road network. The need for schools to be integrated into residentia­l areas and away from the main arterial networks is now underway, thereby freeing up land as well as easing congestion (something that we have witnessed rearing its head recently with a vengeance).

The Urban Plan of 2040 goes further towards this concept of rezoning, moving away from the existing “superblock” paradigm and facilitati­ng a more tranquil propositio­n where inner arteries would be given greater emphasis. The Linear City Model is now giving way to a more complex network with highrises being interrupte­d at key points with lateral nodular configurat­ions. This paves the way for the path dependence of prices, as these arteries come to fruition.

But the grand web of asphalt (euphemisti­cally referred to as ‘roadtown’) will continue to exert its influence in the price discovery of real estate.

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© Gulf News

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