Skip to main content

Dubai plans to be best cycling city by 2040

The plan, by URB urban planning consultancy, is a “paradigm shift" for a city where car is king.
By David Arminas December 1, 2023 Read time: 3 mins
The Loop – an enclosed and at times elevated cycle way – will also have so-called pocket parks, areas of greenery that are intended to facilitate social and leisure gatherings, as well as sports facilities (image courtesy URB)

URB, an urban design consultancy, has unveiled a masterplan to make Dubai the world’s most bike friendly city by 2040, surpassing even Amsterdam and Copenhagen.

The company’s plan is a “paradigm shift in urban mobility” for a city in which the car is king. URB’s study, Dubai Cycle City 2040, envisions various types of cycling infrastructure, including The Loop which will be a 93km “cycling highway”. The goal is to allow residents to cycle or walk to key services and locations within the city within minutes.

“By 2040, Dubai’s car-centric population is expected to more than double, reaching eight million urban dwellers,” said the company in a press release. “Dubai’s urban evolution and sprawl have made cars a necessity for travel and, thus, an indispensable part of the everyday lifestyle. As such, flipping the mode of travel towards cycling requires more than a new way of thinking in mobility; it requires entrepreneurship.”

Baharash Bagherian, chief executive of URB, said urban planners have evolved to become changemakers. “It is no longer about just planning new sustainable cities,” he said. “It is about planning new types of assets for existing cities with a sense of purpose, to make them more sustainable. It is about becoming an agent of change. The Dubai Cycle City 2040 is an embodiment of that entrepreneurial spirit.”

The project, still in the research stage, aims to provide additional utilities and amenities to various neighbourhoods, including urban agriculture, social spaces and sports facilities. It is also designed to accelerate Dubai’s 20-minute city initiative where city dwellers should to be able to walk or bike to 80% of their daily needs and destinations in just 20 minutes. This means that in the coming years, half of Dubai's population should be living within 800m of the nearest public transportation facility.

According the study by URB, most of the 1,000km-long cycling network will connect to public transport to decarbonise the last mile. Elevated cycling tracks is proposed in areas which lack enough space for dedicated or shared lanes. Various types of cycling bridges will re-connect communities that are disconnected by major highways. The Loop – an enclosed and at times elevated cycle way – will also have so-called pocket parks, areas of greenery that are intended to facilitate exercise and social and leisure gatherings, as well as sports facilities.

URB’s proposal also supports Dubai’s 2040 Master Plan that was unveiled in 2021 and intended to increase, among other things, public beach spaces and nature reserves.

URB consists of urban planners, landscape designers and architects whose aim is to accelerate the world’s transition towards net-zero developments.

Related Content

  • CTT 2012/CONEXPO Russia visitors up 20%
    June 13, 2012
    A 20% rise in visitors and a 15% increase in exhibitors at this year’s CTT 2012/CONEXPO Russia, compared to 2011 show levels, illustrated the attraction of big infrastructure project spending Russia to the world’s largest construction equipment companies. Major global brands such as JCB, John Deere, Volvo Construction Equipment (CE), Komatsu, Liebherr, and Wirtgen were among the 911 construction equipment companies from 28 different countries present for the five-day event covering more than 124,000m² at th
  • UN sets global target for road safety
    October 21, 2015
    The UN has set a global benchmark for reducing traffic fatalities on the world’s road network. Data shows that every year, almost 1.3 million people are killed in road crashes around the globe, according to information gathered by the World Health Organisation (WHO). In a bid to tackle this major problem, world leaders recently vowed to halve the number of global deaths and injuries from road traffic accidents by 2020. This target was agreed at the UN Sustainable Development Summit in New York.
  • Norway’s new ‘green’ highway route
    November 13, 2020
    A new route in Norway will provide a faster and greener highway connection between the capital city Oslo and the northern city of Trondheim
  • Norwegians would build new bridge and tunnel links
    June 18, 2021
    Norway’s road transport network is changing radically as the country gears up for greater EV use as well as a gradual phasing out of its traditional ferry links