Saudi university builds on big global demand for high-tech data centers

Top officials from Gulf Data Hub, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology and Ashi Bushnag were among top executives who attended Monday’s ground-breaking ceremony. (KAUST photo)
Updated 19 September 2017
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Saudi university builds on big global demand for high-tech data centers

JEDDAH: Huge investments are being made at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) to capitalize on rising global demand for high-tech data storage.
A groundbreaking ceremony was held on Monday to mark the start of a multimillion-riyal data center project at KAUST.
“As a vendor-neutral facility, the KAUST data center will solve a range of data storage needs, while maintaining the flexibility to accommodate a wide range of future research parks and external partners,” Tarek Al-Ashram, CEO of Gulf Data Hub (GDH), a Dubai-based data center space provider, told a press conference on Monday.
“KAUST is going to be one of our major clients,” he said.
GDH is best known for the development of the Dubai Silicon Oasis data center, a world-class facility completed in 2014.
At KAUST, GDH will be the co-location center for connectivity providers to service the diverse needs of the university, its research park tenants and external customers.
Saudi Aramco, Dow Chemical and SABIC are among the prestigious tenants at the research park, which are already benefiting from the world-class talent available at KAUST, officials pointed out.
Data Hub Tech (DHT), a Saudi entity, will manage the business development, sales and operations of the new carrier- and vendor-neutral data center.
The development of the 27,600 sq. m. state-of-the-art facility comes at a critical time with sharply increased market demand for data centers to accommodate data growth, movement to the cloud, and disaster recovery demands, as well as full compliance with increased regulatory requirements.
“The trend among IT thought leaders is to lease data-center space from experts, rather than build in-house data centers,” added the CEO.
The data center will also provide value-added services to customers with its partner eco-system.
“As the nation embraces a new global era of technological progress and a reality of digital dependence, it is only fitting that it answers the call to pursue desperately needed advanced needs in these areas,” commented Nadhmi Al-Nasr, the university’s interim president, who attended the groundbreaking ceremony.
“In view of this commitment, it is fitting that KAUST take on this important project to help lead the way,” he added.
“We pride ourselves on our exceptional IT infrastructure, which supports our institutional research and innovation strategies, going beyond our campus to address some of the nation and the world’s most pressing needs,” he added.
The construction of the data center, to be operational in 2019, will be undertaken by Jeddah-based design and contracting firm Ashi Bushnag Co.
“This is a game changer for research and innovation infrastructure at KAUST,” said Jason Roos, chief information officer at KAUST.
Roos joined the university in June of 2017 with a mandate to bolster KAUST resources for a burgeoning research ecosystem as well as a booming technology and innovation cluster.
“I’m here to make sure we have the tools on hand to support our labs, our people and our partners well into the foreseeable future. With GDH, we’ve secured an essential piece of that puzzle,” said Roos.
Ahmed Sindi, CEO of Dawiyat — a subsidiary of Saudi Electricity Company​ — said that an independent international gateway is part of GDH’s business plans. “It will offer significant international fiber-optic connectivity and will be a potential site for an additional landing station for submarine cables,” he said at the press conference.


What new technologies are revealing about the Silk Road’s forgotten landscapes

Updated 7 sec ago
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What new technologies are revealing about the Silk Road’s forgotten landscapes

  • Drones and digital tools are allowing archaeologists to map vast areas in hours rather than months of ground surveys
  • In Saudi Arabia, aerial mapping has uncovered dense prehistoric and Bronze Age sites previously thought to be empty

DUBAI: Across the deserts and mountain valleys of the Arab world, drones are now doing work that once took teams of archaeologists months to complete.

In northern Saudi Arabia, for example, aerial surveys can map an entire ancient settlement in minutes, revealing faint outlines of walls, pathways and structures hidden beneath the surface.

These images are later turned into 3D models — part of a growing effort across the region to use technology to trace old trade routes, map forgotten sites and better understand how people once moved across Arabia and beyond.

Much of this work is connected to renewed interest in the Silk Road and the networks that once linked Arabia with the wider world.

The Silk Road refers to a network of ancient trade routes that linked East Asia with the Middle East, North Africa and Europe for more than 1,500 years.

Rather than a single road, it was a vast web of caravan paths and maritime corridors connecting cities from China and Central Asia to Iran, Iraq, the Arabian Peninsula, the Levant and the Mediterranean.

Along these routes, merchants, scholars and travelers exchanged goods such as silk, spices and metalwork, as well as ideas, technologies and cultural traditions that shaped the development of the wider region.

In more recent times, scholars, students and heritage authorities across the Middle East and Central Asia are increasingly relying on drones, laser scanning, photogrammetry and satellite analysis to document archaeological landscapes.

In Saudi Arabia’s AlUla and Khaybar regions — now considered some of the world’s densest concentrations of prehistoric and Bronze Age structures — drone surveys have helped researchers record sites that would otherwise remain inaccessible.

Dr. Hugh Thomas, a lecturer in archaeology at the University of Sydney and co-director of the Prehistoric AlUla and Khaybar Excavation Project, says the scale of the Saudi landscape makes aerial work essential.

“Saudi Arabia contains an exceptionally dense archaeological landscape distributed across a vast geographic area,” he told Arab News. “Drone-based surveys allow large volumes of archaeological data to be collected efficiently.” 

Indeed, many structures sit on steep or remote terrain that ground teams cannot easily reach. This shift to aerial archaeology has also revealed details that would be almost impossible to see from ground level.

Thomas notes that researchers have long suspected a link between water sources and Neolithic mustatil structures, which date back approximately 7,000 years. In 2020, drone images captured by his team near Khaybar also strengthened theories linking mustatil to water sources.

“The drone images revealed that recent rains had settled in specific parts of wadi valleys, exactly where the mustatil were built,” he said. Since then, multiple surveys and peer-reviewed studies have supported this connection, with many mustatil shown to point directly toward water.

In parallel, new technologies are reshaping how archaeologists understand the wider landscape. Thomas says tools such as drones, satellite imagery and 3D modelling allow researchers to document vast areas quickly and at far higher resolution than ever before.

These approaches “enable the rapid, cost-effective documentation of this vast and previously understudied landscape” and create permanent digital records that support long-term monitoring and analysis, he said.

This has been transformative for understanding past movement and land use.

Remote sensing work in northern Saudi Arabia has revealed extensive Bronze Age funerary avenues — pathways lined with monumental tombs, running for thousands of kilometers and linking major oases such as Khaybar, Al-Hait and Al-Huwayyitt.

Drone surveys and 3D models have allowed researchers to classify tomb types more accurately and identify where excavation would yield the most useful results. Thomas says these techniques directly contributed to one of the project’s most significant achievements.

“This has ultimately assisted us with our most recent paper, where we were able to publish the C14 dates of remains found in 40 Bronze Age tombs, helping us understand when these tombs appeared on the landscape and how they developed over time,” he said.

While international collaborations play a central role, Thomas says long-term progress in the Kingdom depends on building local capacity.

He says contributions from Saudi researchers, students and even members of the public are becoming increasingly important.

“Local researchers, students, and members of the public are taking photographs of archaeological sites and sharing them digitally,” he said. “Each image provides a lasting record of archaeological remains.”

In Saudi Arabia’s AlUla, one of the region’s most active archaeological hubs, the Royal Commission for AlUla has supported wide-ranging surveys that combine aerial photography, remote sensing and targeted excavation.

Published research from the AlUla and Khaybar Aerial Archaeology Project describes how thousands of structures — from ancient hunting traps to tombs and settlements — have been recorded using these methods in recent years.

“We’re seeing landscapes we did not even know existed before this kind of work began,” said archaeologist Dr. Rebecca Repper of the University of Sydney in an RCU briefing. 

“Technology is helping us reassess northern Arabia’s role in long-distance connections.”

Recent research across Central Asia shows how drones and LiDAR, a remote-sensing technology used to create extremely accurate 3D maps of landscapes, buildings, or buried features, are transforming the study of Silk Road-era landscapes.

In Uzbekistan, a team led by Dr. Michael Frachetti — an archaeologist at Washington University in St. Louis, who specializes in ancient mobility systems — used drone-mounted LiDAR to scan remote high-altitude terrain, revealing two previously undocumented medieval cities, Tugunbulak and Tashbulak.

A 2024 peer-reviewed study, “Automated analysis of high-resolution lidar traces large-scale medieval urbanism in highland Central Asia,” details how these surveys exposed plazas, fortifications and settlement layouts previously invisible from the ground.

In southeast Kazakhstan, a 2021 study in the journal Applied Sciences shows how UAV photogrammetry helped map irrigation networks, settlement traces and burial mounds linked to medieval trade and pastoral routes.

Together, these findings demonstrate how high-resolution aerial mapping is reshaping our understanding of the landscapes and movement patterns that framed the Silk Road.

For governments, these discoveries are more than scientific. UNESCO describes the Silk Roads as a shared heritage space where cooperation is critical, and regional countries have increasingly embraced cross-border research partnerships.

In Saudi Arabia, AlUla’s collaborations with universities including Oxford, Bologna and the French National Centre for Scientific Research reflect a growing diplomatic interest in cultural research.

These partnerships have generated shared excavations, joint field schools and open-access databases — opportunities that were rare in the region two decades ago.

Digital access is also reshaping how the public engages with this history.

The International Dunhuang Project, a global consortium led by the British Library and multiple Asian national libraries, has digitized hundreds of thousands of manuscripts, murals and archaeological fragments linked to the Silk Road.

Its open platform has become a major educational resource for schools and researchers worldwide.

In AlUla, digital reconstructions and virtual models are increasingly used in classroom activities and community programs.

Youth involvement is part of this shift. In Saudi Arabia, RCU’s assorted heritage guardian programs introduce young people to survey techniques, basic archaeology and remote-sensing tools, helping train a new generation of community researchers.

In parts of Central Asia, student volunteers often support field surveys and digital documentation under national heritage ministries and international missions.

Across deserts, mountains and oasis towns, a fuller picture of ancient networks is beginning to emerge. Every drone flight reveals structures long buried under sand and stone.

“On the plateau, we found a hidden valley with large mounds and undulations on the surface,” Frachetti explained in a Washington University Magazine feature about his team’s drone-assisted work.

“It was obvious, both in person and on the drone-acquired surface model we created, that we had stumbled across something much larger and different from the typical campsite we had expected.”

Meanwhile, every 3D model helps trace how people once traveled, traded and settled across continents.

And every partnership — whether in AlUla, the Gulf, or Central Asia — reinforces the idea that this heritage connects far more than a single nation.

The Silk Road’s story is being rediscovered not through speculation but through data, satellites and the work of a generation that is documenting the past with new precision.