Dubai must be at the top or close to the top of the shopping list for those looking to live and/or invest overseas
Read MoreWellness will be a key theme when the world's wealthy make their next property picks
Read MoreDubai’s real estate market continues its upwards trend
Read MoreMacro-economic factors are likely to define the shape and pace of recovery in 2021
Read MoreThe past four months had the highest number of transactions for villas/townhouses consistently
Read MoreLow-interest rates, competitive prices, and incentives, service charge waivers and fee reductions are helping accelerate real-estate activity
Read MoreMost schools will open on September 2, 2018.
Read MoreLocated in the centre of Dubai Creek Harbour the new retail hub will include a Chinatown, a waterpark and an Art District.
Read MoreAnnouncement comes before historic visit of President Xi Jinping.
Read MoreOn World Population Day, Dubai’s population has surpassed 3 million people, one-third of UAE’s 9.3 million.
As people around the planet observe World Population Day on July 11 to mark the challenges facing 7.6 billion people alive today, experts say cities such as Dubai will have its work cut out for it to accommodate growth while maintaining quality of life and infrastructure.
Dubai’s population has reached 3.086 million people comprising one third of the national UAE population of 9.27 million residents, according to Dubai Statistics Centre figures on Tuesday.
And by 2027, Dubai is expected to jump to more than five million in a city whose population that has grown 1,000 per cent in the last 40 years making it one of the fastest growing cities on the planet thanks to an influx of expatriates seeking work from other countries.
Read MoreVirgin Atlantic has announced that it will withdraw flights between Dubai and London Heathrow from March 31, 2019.
After reviewing its network, the airline has decided the route is no longer economically viable.
Shai Weiss, chief commercial officer for Virgin Atlantic, said: “It‘s never an easy decision to withdraw a route, and we’d like to thank our customers and dedicated team in Dubai for their loyalty over the last 12 years.”
Read MoreNot that long ago, Hanan Mazouzi Sobati faced flagrant sexism at track days in Dubai. An ardent petrolhead, Sobati would go to drive her sports car fast -- really fast -- but many of the overwhelmingly male drivers couldn't see past her gender. "They always thought I was someone else, accompanying someone. I was just there to support him, or to sit in the passenger seat," she recalls. "(It's) as if they didn't see me."
Fellow enthusiast Jalyn Jarvi echoes the sentiment. "You pull up and they expect you to be somebody's girlfriend or wife," she adds. "Everybody's staring at you and it's a little bit uncomfortable."
"It started hitting me that not only they don't expect you to be there, you're not really welcome," says Sobati. Amid the engine noise and tire smoke, an idea was sparked -- one that would become the Arabian Gazelles, Dubai's first all-female supercar club.
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