Aug 13, 2024 • 10 min read
13.08.2024 - 20:05 / cntraveler.com / Conde Nast
Dubai is a welcoming city. It has, after all, gladly received upwards of 85% of its population from overseas with open arms. The metropolis that has risen from the sands of the desert spans just 13.5 square miles (for now), but within its gilded confines, you’ll find a city with many sides, created by people from many places, who each bring a piece of culture from their homeland. But for all its hospitality, many visitors to the city still arrive with some common misconceptions. Below, the editors of Condé Nast Traveller Middle East round up the top advice they want everyone to know before visiting Dubai.
Downtown Dubai is not the most walkable city, but areas like the Marina and Kite Beach offer walkways for pedestrians.
While many major cities around the world will cause you to clock up tens of thousands of steps a day, Dubai isn’t one of them. This is not a city built with pedestrians in mind, and it’s hard to walk from one place to the next (it is 104 degrees Fahrenheit for much of the year, after all). However, that doesn’t mean there aren’t places to walk. Areas like the Dubai Marina, with its towering skyscrapers and superyacht-filled waters, have several miles of pedestrianised walkways, while Kite Beach, one of the city’s most vibrant stretches of sand, has 4.3 miles of walking, running, and cycle track. Luckily, getting around Dubai is straightforward, with a vast and affordable taxi network, and a regular Metro, which runs like an artery through the city, connecting areas like Downtown, Business Bay, and the Marina.
On the subject of taxis, make sure to download the Careem app. It’s a bit like Uber (in fact, it was bought by Uber in 2020), but as well as private taxis you can also virtually hail local Dubai taxis, which are cheaper and regulated by Dubai’s Road and Transport Authority. While taxis are generally easy to hail when out and about in busy areas of the city (just look for the yellow light to signal it's available), Careem can be handy when you don’t spot a free taxi around. You can also order food for delivery via Careem (a bit like Uber Eats) and unlock a Careem Bike to cycle around the city.
As we have mentioned, Dubai is not a city for pedestrians, and while there is a good Metro system, it doesn’t serve all corners of the city and so the vast majority of people here do get around by car. Unfortunately, that means busy roads, especially at peak times in peak season. If you are planning a dinner in Downtown or planning to leave Palm Jumeirah post-sunset, be sure to factor traffic into your journey. It can take close to an hour to reach an 8 p.m. weeknight dinner reservation in DIFC if you are coming from the Marina, and JBR gets particularly congested, especially in the early
Aug 13, 2024 • 10 min read
If your idea of Spain is eating paella, dancing flamenco, and improving your Spanish, Catalonia might surprise you.
For almost two decades, Dubai’s beachfront was something of a graveyard. Towards Abu Dhabi, you had the partially finished Palm Jebel Ali, which had been announced in 2002. Closer to the marina area, there was the struggling “The World” Islands, which dated to 2003. And towards Sharjah, Deira Islands (the 2004 project now known as Dubai Islands), seemed abandoned.
Bermuda-based carrier BermudAir is making it easier to plan an epic vacation for two by offering complimentary companion tickets for fall getaways.
Dangerous wildfires near Athens, Greece forced hundreds to evacuate the suburbs north of the country's capital on Monday, August 12, reported to be the worst fire the Mediterranean country has seen so far this year.
It seems Frontier Airlines CEO Barry Biffle has heard enough criticism of the U.S. ultra-low-cost airline industry — even as the carrier projects more financial losses in the coming months and plans to reduce flights on certain days of the week and push back new aircraft deliveries by years.
Aug 12, 2024 • 11 min read
Tom Hatfield, 74, spent the first 60 years of his life living in Louisiana. However, after traveling extensively over the last few years, the retiree has visited all 50 states and is set to visit his last few national parks this year.
Royal Caribbean first introduced the Allure of the Seas in 2010, but now nearly 15 years later, the cruise line's Oasis Class ship is getting a significant makeover.
My husband and I recently took our two kids (ages 8 and 3) to Washington, DC.
Aug 6, 2024 • 9 min read
As an obsessive traveler, I've always been fascinated by the world of hospitality.