Saudis bid to beautify their cities with street art

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Top Saudi graffiti artists are taking part in the beautification drive in Riyadh. (SPA)
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Top Saudi graffiti artists are taking part in the beautification drive in Riyadh. (SPA)
Updated 15 April 2019
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Saudis bid to beautify their cities with street art

  • The campaign is also meant to raise citizens’ awareness, public ethics, and responsibility toward public places
  • Last month, the Kingdom launched an ambitious  $23 billion project to create vast open green areas in Riyadh

RIYADH: Riyadh Municipality launched on April 10, the “Beautifying Riyadh’s Murals” events that aim to beautify public places and spheres in the capital city, as part of the Kingdom’s Vision 2030.

The events, that witness the participation of top Saudi artists in the art of graffiti, are divided into two stages; the first consists of removal of distorted scriptures off the city’s walls by volunteers, while the second consists of covering the walls with murals painted by famous Saudi artists.

These events come as part of Riyadh municipality’s campaign to beautify the city, to raise citizens’ awareness, public ethics, and responsibility toward public places, in addition to involving citizens in activities with aesthetic dimensions.

Last month, the Kingdom also launched an ambitious  $23 billion project to create vast open green areas in Riyadh including the world’s biggest city park.

Construction will begin this year on four schemes — King Salman Park, Sports Boulevard, Green Riyadh and Riyadh Art — which will create sustainable communities, drive action against climate change and provide up to 70,000 new jobs.

The aim of the project is to “significantly improve the lives of its citizens, transform the city into an attractive destination and make it one of the world’s most livable cities,” the government said.

The four projects — King Salman Park, Sports Boulevard, Green Riyadh and Riyadh Art — will complement the Saudi Vision 2030’s “Quality of Life” program and are aligned with UN Sustainable Development Goals, to create sustainable cities and communities, while driving urgent action against climate change.

Developed with a government investment of $23 billion, the four projects will offer opportunities worth $15 billion for the private sector to invest in residential, commercial, recreational and wellness projects. As well as creating tens of thousands of new jobs, the project will also help boost efforts to improve the city’s health and well-being with a commitment to wellness, health, sports, culture and the arts, underpinned by a commitment to environmental sustainability.

 

Beautifying Makkah Road

The Committee of Fine Arts and Arab Calligraphy has started its campaign to beautify Makkah Road, in the center of Sakaka city, as artists of Al-Jouf area started to paint a huge mural under its auspices, as part of the agreement signed with Al-Jouf municipality and the Saudi Arabia Society for Culture and Art.  

Khaled bin Abdul Rahman Al-Issa, director of culture and arts in Al-Jouf, said that the aim of the mural is to expose and show the cultural, historical, touristic and agricultural landmarks, in addition to the artifacts of Al-Jouf.

 


‘Stability can’t be bought’: Saudi ministers extol benefits of long-term reform in a fragmented world

Updated 56 min 54 sec ago
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‘Stability can’t be bought’: Saudi ministers extol benefits of long-term reform in a fragmented world

  • They outline during discussion at the World Economic Forum in Davos the ways in which the Kingdom is capitalizing on stability as a competitive advantage
  • They highlight in particular the use of predictable policymaking, disciplined public finances, and long-term planning under Saudi Vision 2030

DAVOS: Stability is the crucial ingredient for long-term economic growth, especially in an increasingly fragmented global economy, Saudi ministers said on Thursday at the World Economic Forum in Davos.

It is not something that can be purchased or improvised, said Faisal Alibrahim, the minister of economy and planning, it must be developed patiently.

“You have to build it, accumulate it over time, for it to be the right kind of stability,” he said. “We treat it as a discipline,” he added.

Speaking during a panel discussion on the Saudi economy, Alibrahim and Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan outlined the ways in which the Kingdom has sought to capitalize on stability as a competitive advantage.

They highlighted in particular the use of predictable policymaking, disciplined public finances, and long-term planning under the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 plan for national development and diversification.

Al-Jadaan said governments and businesses alike are operating in a world where uncertainty has become the norm, which places a greater burden on policymakers to reduce ambiguity wherever possible.

“Businesses can price tariffs, they can price taxes,” he said. “What they find very difficult to price is ambiguity. We are trying to ensure that we build that resilience within our economy and give the private sector that predictability that they need.”

This focus on predictability, he added, has been central to Saudi Arabia’s economic transformation, by helping the private sector to plan for the long term while the government undertakes deep structural reform.

Alibrahim noted that trust has become a big factor in global trade and investment, particularly as geopolitical tensions and economic fragmentation intensify.

In a fragmenting world, one of the rarest things now is the idea that a “commitment made today will be honored tomorrow,” he said. Yet trust shapes how the world trades and how markets remain active, because it means participants can predict what will happen, he added. Stability therefore becomes a “rare currency, and even a competitive edge.”

He also said that reform on paper was not enough; it must be coupled with streamlined regulation and continuous engagement, so that businesses can develop long-term thinking and navigate uncertainty with more confidence.

Al-Jadaan framed Saudi Vision 2030 as a multiphase journey that began with structural reforms, followed by an execution-heavy phase, and is now entering a third stage focused on the maximization of impact.

He said the Kingdom was in a phase of “learning, reprioritizing and staying the course,” would make bold decisions, and had the “courage to continue through difficulties.” A key anchor of all this, he added, was discipline in relation to public finance.

“You cannot compromise public finance for the sake of growth,” Al-Jadaan said. “If you spend without restraint, you lose your anchor while the economy is still diversifying.”

This discipline underpins what he described as Saudi Arabia’s “deficit by design” — in other words, borrowing strategically to fund capital expenditure that supports long-term growth, rather than consumption.

“If you borrow to spend on growth-enhancing investment, you are safe,” he said. “If you borrow to consume today, you are leaving the burden to your children.”

Alibrahim said the focus in the next phase of Vision 2030 will be on the optimal deployment of capital, ensuring the momentum continues while costs are tightly managed.

Looking ahead, both ministers emphasized the importance of long-term planning, which can be a challenge for some countries constrained by short election cycles.

“If you cannot take a long-term view in a turbulent world, it becomes very difficult,” Al-Jadaan said.

“Success stories like Singapore, South Korea and China were built on decades-long plans, pursued through good times and bad.”

The ministers’ discussion points were echoed by international participants. Noubar Afeyan, founder and CEO of life sciences venture capital firm Flagship Pioneering, said that by utilizing technology, including artificial intelligence, alongside a strategic vision in the form of Vision 2030, the Kingdom had been able to turn vulnerabilities into strengths, becoming not only self-sufficient but a potential exporter of innovation and intellectual property.

“Uncertainty opens up opportunities for countries that might otherwise be overlooked,” he added.

“Saudi Arabia, with Vision 2030, is positioning itself to not only address its own challenges but also become a net exporter of innovation and expertise.”

Ajay Banga, the president of the World Bank, said Vision 2030 had helped create “physical and human infrastructure” that allows Saudi Arabia to capitalize on its demographic dividend.

Jennifer Johnson, CEO of investment management firm Franklin Templeton, said Saudi policymakers stood out for their openness and curiosity.

“I have spoken to Saudi ministers and they ask what they need to do — that doesn’t happen often,” she said.