Construction is well underway for a new
Financial District on the outskirts of
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, which is designed to make it easier for foreign business visitors to come to the region
SHOWS:RIYADH,
SAUDI ARABIA (MAY 11,2016) (
REUTERS -
ACCESS ALL)
The jungle of steel and glass encompassing the new
King Abdullah Financial District (
KAFD) rising from a patch of desert on the outskirts of
Riyadh illustrates the spendthrift habits of
Saudi Arabia's recent past.
Plans to reconfigure KAFD with an easier visa regime for foreign business visitors and a separate regulatory structure
point to
Saudi hopes of transitioning to a more parsimonious future suited to an era of lower oil income.
The distinctive towers that will house offices, homes, shops and hotels, surrounded by palm-shaded walkways, are aimed at emulating nearby
Dubai by attracting an international business elite whose investments will stimulate the kingdom's economy.
'Especially after the project of Saudi vision for
2030 , I think the new orientation for the government is towered financial development in the country and specially in the funding of governmental project and this huge project of king
Abdullah, Financial
City is one of the milestone of that strategy,' said Saudi citizen,
Osama Al-Barikan
Whether it can do so, in a country widely seen abroad as a difficult place to live and work, and where past reforms have been obstructed by an ossified bureaucracy, may prove a litmus test for Saudi Arabia's broader hopes of change.
Since oil prices began to rise early last decade, Saudi Arabia has spent vast sums to fatten social benefits, employ hundreds of thousands of citizens in state jobs and erect lavish infrastructure projects - on sometimes dubious economic grounds.
KAFD is a case in point, often viewed in the Gulf as among the glossiest excesses of Saudi Arabia's oil boom profligacy: a white elephant in the making, expected to be delivered years late, costing $10 billion and lacking tenants.
Even
Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman included a rare public rebuke for a high-profile project in the text of his "
Vision 2030" reform plans, saying work on the district had begun "without consideration of its economic feasibility".
The initial plan was to provide infrastructure and good terms for businesses to build there themselves. Then Riyadh decided to simply develop the site itself despite having few commitments from prospective tenants among the main banks.
Worse was to come: instead of building it in phases, as is normal with big projects, the government asked contractors to work on all its 73 towers at once, along with infrastructure, delaying implementation and creating a glut of office space.
What the governments now wants is to create a "special zone" with internationally competitive regulations, more residential space, an easier visa regime and a direct connection to the airport.
The Public Investment Fund, which the
Vision proposes to transform into the world's biggest sovereign wealth fund, will be based there, providing a draw for other international businesses.
Walid Aliesa, chief executive of Al Ra'idah, the government-owned developer of KAFD, said he was not able to comment on the proposed changes at present.
However, the masterplan architect,
Danish firm
Henning Larsen, included a lot of flexibility in its plans after researching the history of other international financial districts around the world.
As a result, changing things now to include more residential space, which might be easier to rent than high-end offices, should be "perfectly fine" said
Jacob Kurek, a partner in the firm and design responsible for the KAFD masterplan.
A direct link to
King Khaled International Airport should also be straightforward to install, via Riyadh's new metro which will have a station - designed by the late
British architect
Zaha Hadid - at KAFD, he said.
How other changes, such as its special zone status with a different regulatory regime, the promised visa exemptions and any efforts to blunt Saudi Arabia's strict social restrictions might be arranged remain a matter of conjecture.
Visas can take many days to arrange and require a complex process of invitation by a sponsor and plenty of supplementary documentation.
Setting up a business means getting permissions from many government departments.
Women must wear an ankle-length cloak in public and they are forbidden from driving.
Unrelated men and women may not mingle unchaperoned.
Cinemas, musical concerts and dancing are banned and alcohol and pork are illegal. All businesses must shut for half an hour during each of
Islam's five daily prayers.
`I think it is a good idea to have customize visa, but I think to put some restriction criteria to those want come to here (KAFD).
Yes this will make a big change a critical change,' added Al-Barikan.
- published: 17 May 2016
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