LONDON: Separated by 300 km and 4,000 years of history, 海角直播鈥檚 oldest and newest cities may seem to have little in common beyond the mutual heritage of the land they share.
In fact, the story of the ancient settlement of Hegra in AlUla and the vast embryonic megacity of Neom is an inspiring tale of two cities that encapsulates the ambition of 海角直播鈥檚 Vision 2030, the 鈥渂old yet achievable blueprint for an ambitious nation鈥 conceived by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
Hewn from the rocks of the Hijaz in the Kingdom鈥檚 northwest two millennia ago by the Nabateans, the mysterious forebears of today鈥檚 Saudis, Hegra was the nerve center of a commercial empire that dominated trade throughout the ancient Middle East.
Neom, launched by the crown prince in 2017, is destined to transform over 26,500 sq. km in 海角直播鈥檚 northwestern Tabuk region, including 468 km of Red Sea waterfront. More than 30 times the size of New York City, it is, as the government has declared, nothing less than 鈥渢he world鈥檚 most ambitious project.鈥
Both cities are centerpieces of the crown prince鈥檚 determination to grow and diversify the nation鈥檚 economy away from reliance on fossil fuels, and living examples of how the great strategic plan is focused not only on building the nation鈥檚 future, but also on safeguarding its past.
Nowhere in the Kingdom is that past more dramatically represented than at Hegra, an archaeological wonderland that in 2008 became the first site in 海角直播 to be inscribed on UNESCO鈥檚 World Heritage List.
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Hegra is surrounded by spectacular monumental tombs, carved from the rocks over 2,000 years ago. Many are decorated with carved images of monsters, animals, human faces and Nabatean inscriptions, offering a unique insight into the lives of the people who lived there.
Once at the heart of a dynamic kingdom that attracted traders, travelers and invaders from the four corners of the Middle East and beyond, today the ancient city is the centerpiece of the 22,000 sq. km AlUla region, an area roughly the size of Belgium.
Home to more than 23,000 sites of archaeological interest, and the focus of fast-moving plans to transform its dramatic landscape and heritage into one of the world鈥檚 great cultural tourism destinations, AlUla is a cornerstone of Vision 2030.
The Royal Commission for AlUla (RCU) is working to transform an area that throughout history has served as a meeting place for caravans, merchants and pilgrims into a major global destination, a 鈥渓iving, open museum鈥 complete with museums, archaeological sites, luxury hotels and entertainment offerings.
鈥淧eople from across the world will be touched by the transcendental beauty of AlUla,鈥 RCU CEO Amr Al-Madani said last year. 鈥淚t is truly a humbling destination. When you visit, you immediately understand why civilization after civilization chose to make this magnificent place their home.鈥
Tourists will be able to visit soon. This month it was announced that the archaeological sites and other cultural and heritage attractions of AlUla will reopen to the public in October. From then on they will be accessible all year round, adding to the other attractions at AlUla such as the 11-week annual Winter at Tantora cultural festival, which since 2018 has attracted a wide range of international music stars.
Other projects in the pipeline, including the Sharaan Resort and Nature Reserve, due to open in 2023, will boost AlUla鈥檚 profile as a must-visit international destination. For those who call AlUla home today, a project that by 2035 is predicted to see 2 million visitors per year will also massively boost the local economy, generating 35,000 jobs and contributing an estimated SR120 billion ($32 billion) to the Kingdom鈥檚 gross domestic product.
The project has already had an impact on local lives, demonstrating on a micro scale the massive potential of Vision 2030 to transform the Kingdom鈥檚 economic future.聽Last year, Arab News reported聽that in under three years Al-Ula, a once-neglected region with few prospects for its residents, had achieved a 鈥渘egative鈥 unemployment rate of 2 percent.
Many more jobs are on the way. The RCU is running the Hammayah program to train 2,500 residents as advocates for AlUla鈥檚 heritage. A scholarship program will also see 1,000 students from AlUla sent overseas to study subjects vital to the region鈥檚聽development as a cultural tourism destination.
If the ancient city of Hegra dominated the cultural and commercial landscape of its time, 300 km to the northwest a megacity is emerging which, in the words of the crown prince, 鈥渨ill drive the future of human civilization.鈥 Neom, vast and being developed with its own rules and regulations independent of the Kingdom鈥檚 existing governmental framework, is perhaps best described as a city-state in the making.
At its launch in October 2017, the crown prince said Neom would 鈥渇ocus on nine specialized investment sectors and living conditions that will drive the future of human civilization 鈥 energy and water, mobility, biotech, food, technological and digital sciences, advanced manufacturing, media and entertainment, with livability as its foundation.鈥
Funded initially to the tune of $500 billion by 海角直播鈥檚 Public Investment Fund (PIF), which the crown prince chairs, Neom is expected to attract regional and international investment as its potential becomes apparent.
Without doubt it will be an attractive place to live, work and visit 鈥 and a dramatic symbol of 海角直播鈥檚 determination to meet the challenges of climate change head-on by diversifying its economy away from reliance on fossil fuels.
Situated in a part of the Kingdom blessed with breezes and mild temperatures, the development of what will be some of the world鈥檚 largest wind and solar farms means Neom will be powered solely by renewable energy.
Future technologies of all kinds, said the crown prince, will 鈥渇orm the cornerstone for Neom鈥檚 development,鈥 from automated vehicles, passenger drones and free high-speed wireless internet access, to new ways of growing and processing food, and free world-class continuous online education.
Despite the 4,000-year gulf between them, in many ways the two cities, ancient and modern, are twinned.
Located within eight hours鈥 flying time of 70 percent of the world鈥檚 population, Neom is, in the words of Gavin van Tonder, head of its water sector, 鈥渁n opportunity to create a template for what the world needs to be in the future.鈥 The clue, after all, is in the name. Neom is derived from neo, the Latin word for new, and M, the first letter of the Arabic word mostaqbal (future).
Hegra, a self-contained city-state positioned at the聽junction of Arabia鈥檚 key trading routes, was the Neom of its day. Now, emerging from the past as part of the cultural reawakening of the AlUla region, it has a key role to play in the building of that new future.