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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Al Noor City (Arabic: مدينة النور, "Medinat an-Noor") is a pair of proposed twin cities which would be part of a mega project to link Asia and Africa by building a transcontinental bridge over the Red Sea.[1] The total investment is expected to reach 200 billion United States dollars[1] over a 15-year period.

A key part of the plan is to connect the two cities with a bridge named the Bridge of the Horns, spanning the southern mouth of the Red Sea. The two planned cities are expected to be built on each end of the Bridge of the Horns. One Al-Noor city is planned to be built in Yemen on an area of 1,500 square kilometres (580 sq mi); the linking city is planned to be built in Djibouti on 1,000 square kilometres (390 sq mi).[1] The twin cities will run on renewable energy. On the Djibouti side, President Ismael Omar Guelleh has granted 500 km2 (190 sq mi) to build Noor City, the first of the hundreds of Cities of Light the Saudi Binladen Group envisions building. The developers state that they expect Noor City to have 2.5 million residents by 2025, and the Yemeni twin city to have 4.5 million residents, while they envision a new airport serving both cities at a capacity of 100 million passengers annually. A new highway connecting the cities to Dubai is proposed, though there are no plans for roads to connect sparsely populated Djibouti with the population centers of Addis Ababa in Ethiopia or Khartoum in Sudan. The plan is extremely expensive and ambitious, and is sited in a relatively undeveloped area with sparse resources; according to The Economist, "Africans may wonder why the hub is not being built in a bit of Africa where more Africans live and which has food and water."[2]

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Transcription

Timeline

  • July 2009 - Construction of the bridge began[3]
  • June 2010 - Phase I of Yemen and Djibouti Causeway delayed[4]
  • 2020 - Planned end of bridge construction[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c $200b Al-Noor cities to be built in Yemen and Djibouti Archived 2011-06-11 at the Wayback Machine, menafn.com, 2008
  2. ^ "The Red Sea: Can it really be bridged?". The Economist. 2008-07-31. Retrieved 2011-01-07.
  3. ^ "Construction begins on Yemen-Djibouti Bridge". Archived from the original on 2010-07-30. Retrieved 2010-10-10.
  4. ^ Phase I of Yemen and Djibouti Causeway delayed
  5. ^ "COWI homepage in danish". Archived from the original on 2009-06-12. Retrieved 2010-10-10.

External links

This page was last edited on 29 March 2024, at 00:39
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