Burj Khalifa Pictures...
Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest building was the combination of state-of-the-art technologies and cultural heritage of the region.
Ski Dubai Pictures
Thursday, October 20, 2016
Wednesday, October 5, 2016
Ski Dubai Pictures
Ski Dubai Pictures |
Ski Dubai Pictures |
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Tuesday, October 4, 2016
What is Ski Dubai?
One day I went with my family to Ski Dubai, it
was very cold there. Also there was snow! And there was some closets so we can
put our bags and our stuff inside. We saw penguins and it was not allowed to
take a picture for the penguins because it will damage their eyes, so the staff
prevented us from taking photos to protect the penguins. And then we played
with the Chairlifts, after that I went to ski at the soft snow. At first I was
learning how to ski. But I fell down when I was skating. The temperature was
-5! My face and hands was cold so I wore gloves.
Then we got on a ball made of plastic! And we
went down from a coast. Then we made a Snow Man and we gave it a name: Snowy!
It was a very nice place. I advice you to go there with your family or your friends..
Also you can go by yourself.
Monday, October 3, 2016
Dubai announces plans for new ‘happiness city’
Dubai, the
glistening, oil-rich city in the United Arab Emirates,
is already a place known for its excess, housing record-breakers such
as the world's tallest building and the world's largest indoor ski
resort. As Dubai's leader, Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum, once put it: "We want to be number
one."
But now the city is increasingly becoming obsessed with
succeeding at something else: happiness.
This week, Dubai revealed plans for the world's first
"city of happiness" — which it says means a city built
totally around the happiness of its residents.
"At Dubai South we welcome you to the City of You, to be
part of a re-invented urban ecosystem and experience, for the very first time,
a city designed primarily on the happiness and well-being of its people, with
the aim of providing solutions for everyday living," Khalifa al-Safin,
executive chairman of Dubai Aviation City Corp. and Dubai South, said at the
Cityscape Global conference in Dubai on Tuesday, according to Arabian Business. Click bellow to see
"The time has come to welcome home happiness,"
Safin said.
Dubai South, formerly known as Dubai World, is a project
started by Maktoum. South of Dubai proper, it is also home to the
enormous Al Maktoum International Airport. That airport is still under
construction. When it is completed, it is expected to be the largest in
the world.
Two new residential real estate projects in Dubai South
— The Villages and The Pulse — were launched at the Cityscape
Global conference. The hope is that about 1 million people will eventually
live in the area, enticed by the promise of a city built around its citizens'
well-being. The residential district of the new city is designed to be within
walking distance of all sorts of amenities, among them special measures to
prevent traffic congestion.
An entire city built around happiness may sound like a grandiose
project, but in the UAE, it makes some sense. This year, the
government announced it was creating a position called the "minister
of state for happiness," a move that prompted both praise and mockery
online, given the Emirates' questionable
human rights record. "Happiness is a serious job for the
government," Minister of State for Happiness Ohood al Roumi later told
CNN. "I think the main job for the government is to create
happiness."
Prior
to that announcement, Dubai had already launched its own "Happiness
Index" in 2014, designed to help the city make policy that improved the
well-being of its residents in immaterial ways. The system works with
touch-screen terminals placed in public buildings, where passersby
are encouraged to leave feedback. The country aims to achieve 95 percent
happiness by 2021, according to one
recent report. And more recently, Dubai opened a
"Happiness Center," designed to help
residents improve their satisfaction by offering easy access to birth
certificates, medical reports and other information.
The
UAE is hardly the first country to pursue this goal. In 2014, Venezuelan
President Nicolás Maduro announced the creation of a "vice ministry of
supreme social happiness." The following year, Ecuador announced it
was creating a state secretary of "buen vivir" – a phrase that
roughly translates to "good living" or "well-being." And
in 1972, Bhutan created its "gross national happiness" (GNH) to
direct policy. Since then, several have followed in Bhutan's footsteps by using
some kind of happiness measurement to craft government policy.
What's
less clear, of course, is whether any of these measures work. In the most
recent U.N. World Happiness Report (itself inspired by the GNH), Bhutan ranks a
less-than-impressive 84 out of 158 countries in terms of happiness.
Venezuela and Ecuador ranked 44th and 52nd, respectively. And the U.A.E.
dropped from 14th in 2012 to 28th in 2015, despite its new
happiness-focused measures.
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