Egypt: Sheikh Zayed City Residents Say No to Towers

Sheikh Zayed Business Park model animation
Sheikh Zayed Business Park model animation
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Egypt: Sheikh Zayed City Residents Say No to Towers

Sheikh Zayed Business Park model animation
Sheikh Zayed Business Park model animation

A newly announced real-estate development project in Egypt’s Sheikh Zayed City drew public outrage on the basis that it would unleash an urban planning catastrophe to the rather peaceful area. The housing ministry, however, chose to back the mega venture labeling it a “major leap” forward for the city.

Controversy erupted after business magnate, Naguib Sawiris, pitched in plans for building a 20-story skyscraper in the west Cairo city. Since its inception, Sheikh Zayed City has maintained a simplistic urban planning blueprint which kept construction projects to a four-story tops policy.

Locals, journalists, and writers took to social media against the project, saying it would pave the way to wreak the peace and tranquility enjoyed by the Sheikh Zayed Business Park nongated community.

The Park, where the tower was meant to be erected, is situated in the heart of Sheikh Zayed city, one of the new residential areas developed at the outskirts of Cairo.

Novelist and journalist Amr Taher, one of the Park’s residents, personally launched a series of fierce attacks, criticizing the project for its nature which he considered alien to the Park’s original overview.

Former Egyptian Housing Minister Eng. Hafallah Al-Kafrawi, according to Taher, had exclusively designed the Sheikh Zayed City without tall buildings, setting a different model for modern urban cities.

Kafrawi’s design attracted a community which matches its form and model of architecture and lifestyle, Taher said, stressing that “those who choose to live in Sheikh Zayed City, aren’t only choosing a house, but choosing a way of life.”

Taher added that a “residential tower destroys the low rise buildings concept on which the city is founded.”

For Egypt, this is a superstructure that threatens to breakdown a residential community’s model of living. For example, in Cairo’s Nasr City, original service facilities failed to accommodate urban expansions and overcrowding, Taher told Asharq Al-Awsat.

Public backlash saw a number of residents pressing charges at a number of administrative courts to stop the project, citing their fear that their “calm city” would become an “unplanned accident”.

It is feared that Sawiris’ venture would lay the foundations for a trend that could transform the city from a residential haven to a commercial hub.

Tamer Mumtaz, a local economist and real estate expert, told Asharq Al-Awsat that Sawiris’ tower will trigger an economic boom in the area, increasing land prices and open up investment opportunities.

“The fears of the city's residents are not in the right place,” Mumtaz said.

“The population is saying that the expansion of the city must be horizontal, not vertical, because vertical expansion is usually associated with densely populated areas, and leads to the growth of slums-- like what had happened in Nasr City-- but the reality is that Sheikh Zayed City has no slums,” he added, stressing that “so long that the government did not license other towers,” there is no problem.



Hezbollah Says Fired Missiles at Base Near South Israel's Ashdod

Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system operates to intercept incoming projectiles, amid hostilities between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, in Nahariya, Israel, November 21, 2024. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system operates to intercept incoming projectiles, amid hostilities between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, in Nahariya, Israel, November 21, 2024. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
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Hezbollah Says Fired Missiles at Base Near South Israel's Ashdod

Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system operates to intercept incoming projectiles, amid hostilities between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, in Nahariya, Israel, November 21, 2024. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system operates to intercept incoming projectiles, amid hostilities between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, in Nahariya, Israel, November 21, 2024. REUTERS/Thomas Peter

Hezbollah said its fighters on Thursday fired missiles at a military base near south Israel’s Ashdod, the first time it has targeted so deep inside Israel in more than a year of hostilities.

Hezbollah fighters "targeted... for the first time, the Hatzor air base" east of the southern city, around 150 kilometers from Lebanon’s southern border with Israel, "with a missile salvo," the Iran-backed group said in a statement.

A rocket fired from Lebanon killed a man and wounded two others in northern Israel on Thursday, according to the Magen David Adom rescue service.
The service said paramedics found the body of the man in his 30s near a playground in the town of Nahariya, near the border with Lebanon, after a rocket attack on Thursday.
Israel meanwhile struck targets in southern Lebanon and several buildings south of Beirut, the Lebanese capital.

Israel has launched airstrikes against Lebanon after Hezbollah began firing rockets, drones and missiles into Israel the day after Hamas' attack on Israel last October. A full-blown war erupted in September after nearly a year of lower-level conflict.
More than 3,500 people have been killed in Lebanon, according to the country’s Health Ministry, and over 1 million people have been displaced. It is not known how many of those killed were Hezbollah fighters and how many were civilians.
On the Israeli side, Hezbollah’s aerial attacks have killed more than 70 people and driven some 60,000 from their homes.