A blueprint for preserving Saudi Arabia’s urban heritage

Jeddah's old district of Al-Balad. (Shutterstock)
Updated 07 August 2019
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A blueprint for preserving Saudi Arabia’s urban heritage

  • Two ministries have entered into a strategic partnership to improve the Kingdom's urban landscapes
  • Buildings with historical value regardless of age stand to gain from the new restoration program

JEDDAH: Public spaces express the culture and identity of a city’s inhabitants, regardless of their backgrounds. Be it in Saudi Arabia or France or Russia, cities are shaped by collective identities, shared memories, cultures and histories.

The world’s most famous public places tell stories that influenced the social and political life of their cities, such as the Concorde Square in Paris, St Mark’s in Venice, Trafalgar Square in London, Times Square in New York and Moscow’s Red Square. All have now become social platforms with cultural connotations.
Similarly, public spaces in Saudi Arabia have become areas of popular interaction. Riyadh’s Al-Masmak Square and Jeddah’s Al-Balad are two places where residents meet during holidays or to enjoy programs organized by government agencies.

These activities have contributed to increasing social interaction in Saudi society and have incentivized new economic projects. It is in this spirit that two Saudi government ministries agreed in July to join forces in a bid to preserve key historical and cultural landmarks in the Kingdom. The Ministry of Municipal and Rural Affairs and the Ministry of Culture signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) and a strategic partnership to improve the Kingdom’s urban landscapes.
According to the Ministry of Culture, the MoU will have an impact on the shape of public places in Saudi cities. It will ensure that all components of urban landscape, including streets, squares, fields and parks, reflect the Kingdom’s identity.

The MoU envisions the restoration of historical buildings, developing a building classification program, enhancing the culture sector and establishing a specialized team to oversee the aesthetics of artworks and statues in public places.
The classification program will lay the groundwork for registering buildings. Buildings with historical value regardless of age stand to benefit from the new program.




Projects are under way to reconstruct Ad Diriyah, Saudi Arabia’s old center of government. (Shutterstock)

Up until now, the practice has been to demolish non-ancient buildings simply because it was permitted under the law. The classification program aims to do away with random demolitions, and focus on preserving buildings to give them social and historical value.
A separate joint working group will handle all cultural issues and pass on recommendations to the relevant authorities. Joint committees will be established to support collaborative work between the two ministerial bodies.
Separately, the Saudi Commission for Tourism and Cultural Heritage has delivered several urban heritage projects. They include protecting and registering heritage buildings, raising awareness, rehabilitating urban sites, training the sector’s workforce, providing technical support to building owners and creating partnerships with governmental and private-sector entities.
This step is driven by Vision 2030’s recognition of the importance of preserving the Kingdom’s sophisticated heritage in order to “promote national unity and consolidate true Islamic and Arab values.”
People come first, says Razan Tariq Sijeeni, a graphic artist and scholar interested in culture and identity studies. The efforts of governmental entities are necessary because preserving urban history is key to creating a sense of belonging, she told Arab News.

FAST FACTS

  • Vision 2030 aims to make Saudi Arabia an attractive tourist destination.
  • Government is promoting national unity and identity through the Kingdom's sophisticated heritage. 
  • Projects include establishment of museums and creation of heritage sites.
  • More heritage sites being included in National Antiquities Register; villages and traditional towns being restored to receive visitors.
  • Economic and hospitality activities operated by local people encouraged.

“But what it is also important is to facilitate the place to serve the people living in that area,” she said.
Sijeeni, a Harvard University graduate and lecturer of graphic design in the College of Arts and Design at Jeddah University, said the most important factor is local inhabitants. She said that they have to be involved in the development process in order to preserve the urban historic fabric of the city.
Speaking about Al-Balad in Jeddah, Sijeeni said a common problem could potentially crop up in Saudi Arabia as a result of the regeneration of old areas. “Most of the people who are living and working in those areas now are either poor or undocumented,” she said.
“What happens everywhere in the world is when the government decides to preserve an urban area, they add facilities, which makes prices go up. As a result, people of the area can no longer afford it, so they find themselves forced to leave. Soho in New York is an example of this trend.”
Sejeeni said communication between the public and the authorities in charge of a project would help achieve better results.
Furthermore, Sejeeni said, “when we first modernized our cities after the oil revolution, we depended on foreign experts who did not understand the social patterns and fabrics of the country. One could argue that implementing urban plans should be for the people, not on the people, which had its impact on the society, though not necessarily negatively since it is just the way of development.
“However, the rapid changes caused a shock to society and pushed people to create a romantic image of the past.”
Sejeeni said it is necessary to preserve the diversity of the Saudi identity as it is what unites us.




Batha district in Riyadh. (Shutterstock)

“It is now time to depend on local expertise,” she said. “We need to focus on the locals to build something for us.”
In his 1995 book, “Great Streets,” American urban designer Allan Jacobs said: “The best streets are those than can be remembered. They leave strong, long, continuing positive impressions. Thinking of a city, including one’s own, one might well think of a particular street and have a desire to be there. Such a street can be memorable.”
Urban memory plays an essential role in building the individual’s identity and sense of belonging to the place, its profound psychological and social impact gives it a critical value.
Dr. Yasser El-Sheshtawy is an independent scholar, researcher and writer who spent over 20 years of his life in the Gulf region as a professor of architecture. According to him, “at its most basic level, national identity means people having a clear sense of themselves, who they are, what their role is in the world and whether their country has a clear and articulated vision of itself.”
An important condition for the proper articulation of a national identity is a “connection to the land” or “attachment to place,” he told Arab News.
“This means that people feel connected to the city they live in and that it reflects their aspirations and dreams.”
But how can attachment to place be created? El-Sheshtawy believes that “attachment to place comes about by having a built environment that incorporates the past and the present, where old buildings are not just demolished haphazardly but where structures are preserved and kept based on a process that incorporates the role they play in contemporary society and the extent to which they serve people’s needs.”




Riyadh’s Al-Masmak Square. (Shutterstock)

He said old landmarks are not there to simply admire visually but play an important social role. “In such a society and city, a strong sense of national identity can come about because people will feel that this is about them,” he said.
A perfect city is one where the different aspects of its history are revealed and where aspirations of being part of the modernizing world are fostered. El-Sheshtawy calls this “the concept of ‘urban palimpsest,’ where there is a mix of different layers, new and old, which exist in a kind of dynamic relationship. Like a manuscript where things are erased and written over, but always some traces remain.”
Urban memory provides a continuation of people’s traditions through which young generations can see how their city developed. This is typically achieved through a process of preservation in which old structures are reconstituted as museums or heritage centers. And if these old buildings have been entirely removed, they are sometimes rebuilt imitating their prior shape.
El-Sheshtawy said the pattern is common in many cities in the Gulf, where old places were redeveloped to be open air museums for visitors to experience the past. “Similarly in Riyadh, there are currently efforts in the Qasr Al-Hokm area to develop the old market and to reconstruct Ad Diriyah, the city’s old center of government.”
While such an approach is important to preserve the past, there is a danger that some of these places “will turn into a fossilized version of the past — in the sense that they are not integrated into the city’s everyday life and are treated more like an urban curiosity to be visited on special occasions,” El-Sheshtawy added.
Another effort should be directed to searching for and upgrading buildings, structures and markets that still serving a function in society “in a way so that they continue to be an important part of the city.”
For example, the old markets of Batha and Deira in Riyadh and the Qasr Al-Hokm area are “a good example of a project that architecturally alludes to the past and its traditions while also integrating with the city’s contemporary and daily life.”
According to El-Sheshtawy, these areas can encompass a diverse chronological range. “Old Riyadh contains many structures and buildings from the 1960s and 70s that could be preserved as they tell an important story of the city’s growth — they may not look remarkable but are nevertheless part of a nation’s story and its identity.”
Yet there is a danger to look at anything built in the last two or three decades with nostalgia and thus seek to keep things as they are. “A fetishization of the past, that seeks to keep society and cities in a frozen state,” is how El-Sheshtawy describes it. “A dynamic society should look forward. Old buildings that no longer serve a specific purpose or are in a state of deterioration can be replaced.”


Saudi authorities issue severe weather warning

Updated 33 min 53 sec ago
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Saudi authorities issue severe weather warning

  • Schools, universities in some regions switch to remote learning after storms, high winds forecast

RIYADH: Saudi authorities warned residents that most parts of the Kingdom will experience severe weather until Friday.

The National Center of Meteorology on Monday forecast moderate-to-heavy rain in the Madinah, Makkah, Jeddah, Baha and Najran regions, accompanied by high winds, hail and thunder.

Saudi Arabia’s General Directorate of Civil Defense also issued severe weather warnings accompanied by safety instructions as the country braces for heavy rainfall in coming days.

The Civil Defense said that most parts of the Kingdom will experience moderate-to-torrential thundershowers, accompanied by strong winds, until Friday.

Regions to be affected include Asir, Baha, Makkah, Madinah, Jazan, Qassim, Jouf, Hail, Tabuk, Northern Borders, Riyadh and the Eastern Province.

The General Directorate of Civil Defense has urged people to take precautions, remain indoors during stormy weather, and adhere to its instructions.

Schools in Jeddah, Makkah and Madinah regions switched to online classes through the Madrasati remote-learning platform on Monday after authorities warned of storms and possible floods this week.

The King Abdulaziz University in Jeddah, University of Jeddah, University of Taif, and Umm Al Qura University in Makkah were closed on Monday and postponed scheduled exams until further notice.

Taibah University in Madinah and Saudi Electronic University’s branch in Jeddah also suspended in-person classes on Monday, and switched to remote learning.

Jeddah Municipality implemented a field plan to deal with the weather conditions, and urged residents to show caution and stay away from flooded areas.

Bandar bin Saleh Al-Hadiya, director of the Ministry of Environment, Water and Agriculture branch in the Northern Border region, inspected dam safety in Arar ahead of the rainy situation.

Riyadh region was also hit by a heavy sandstorm accompanied by high winds on Sunday night, leaving the city skyline enveloped in dust.

On Monday, the NCM issued a red alert for dust storms in parts of the Riyadh region,  including the capital, and Al-Aflaj, Al-Sulail and Wadi Al-Dawasir governorates.


GCC holds Gulf-US Joint Ministerial Meeting to advance regional security

Updated 30 April 2024
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GCC holds Gulf-US Joint Ministerial Meeting to advance regional security

  • In Riyadh, Blinken is expected to meet with senior Saudi leaders and hold a wider meeting with counterparts from five Arab states

RIYADH: Secretary Anthony Blinken participated in a joint US-Gulf Cooperation Council ministerial meeting to advance coordination on regional security on Monday in Riyadh.

“There really are two paths forward for the region as a whole. One driven with division with destruction, with violence with permanent insecurity. The other, greater integration, greater security, greater peace,” Secretary Anthony Blinken said.

“ I think the region today shows that many more of us want to pursue that affirmative path, and I’m grateful to our colleagues in the GCC for working in partnership to advance in that direction,” he added.

During his opening remarks, Secretary Blinken expressed that the meeting serves as an opportunity to advance efforts to promote greater stability in this region.

Blinken arrived in Riyadh Monday morning as a part of a 3-day visit from April 29-May 1 to meet with regional partners.

The secretary highlighted that in the upcoming days as he travels to Jordan and Palestine he will meet with humanitarian groups and the Israeli governemnt to discuss the developments in Gaza.

During his remarks Secretary Blinken highlighted the current U.S. interventions such as the increased value of aid delivered to Gaza and the building of the US maritime corridor.

“It is not enough we still need to get more aid in and around Gaza,” he explained.  

During his speech, Blinken underlines that the U.S. will continue to work with its GCC partners to “build just and lasting peace.”

“We are focused on addressing the greatest threat to regional stability and regional security, Iran,”

“ This is the first meeting since Iran’s unprecedented attack on Israel, The first direct attack from Iran to Israel with more than 300 projectiles including over 100 holistic missiles," Blinken explained.  

Blinken underlined that the attacks from Iran stress the importance of working together in integrated defense.

He highlighted that this will be the discussion topic in the upcoming US-GCC meeting in a few weeks on integrated air, militry defense and maritime security.

The other discussion topic underlined by Blinken was the “ ways to preserve freedom of navigation in the Red Sea,”

“The Houthi attacks not only undermine security but they undermine the lives and livelihoods of people throughout the region including in Yeman, the very people they profess they want to represent, The cost of goods have gone up, and it’s harder to get things into Yemen, to the north we’re people so desperately need it,”

“This needs to stop and we are being resolute in doing everything we can to put a stop to it,” Blinken sid.

During his opening remarks, the GCC Secretary-General Jassim Al-Budaiwi called for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and called for an international conference on implementing a two-state solution.

He also underlined the need for effective international measures to end the violence in the West Bank.

He also expressed the importance of ensuring the security of relief corridors for the delivery of humanitarian aid.

Al-Budaiwi emphasized that the continuous escalation between Iran and Israel threatens the security and stability of the region.

The GCC Secretary General also expressed concern over the Houthi attacks on the Red Sea.

Following his visit to the Kingdom, Blinken will be meeting with counterparts in Jordan and Palestine.

As a part of his visit, the secretary will discuss various topics including the ongoing efforts to achieve a ceasefire in Gaza that secures the release of hostages.

Other topics in the meetings will include humanitarian aid to Gaza, limiting the spillover of conflict and ongoing efforts to achieve regional security.

A pathway to an independent Palestinian state with security guarantees for Israel will also be one of the topics of discussion during his visit.

On the sidelines of the meeting, The Saudi Minister of foreign affairs, Prince Faisal bin Farhan met with Secretary Blinken. The two discussed the developments in the Gaza Strip, the importance of a ceasefire, efforts to ensure entry of urgent humanitarian aid, and joint efforts.


Saudi FM discusses two-state solution with French, Turkish counterparts

Updated 29 April 2024
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Saudi FM discusses two-state solution with French, Turkish counterparts

  • The discussions took place on the sidelines of a ministerial consultative meeting to discuss Gaza war

RIYADH: Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan held talks with his French and Turkish counterparts on Monday.
The discussions took place on the sidelines of a ministerial consultative meeting of the six-party Arab Committee to discuss developments in the Gaza war, the Saudi Press Agency reported.
Talks with Hakan Fidan of Turkiye and Stephane Sejourne focused on coordinating efforts to advance the two-state solution and acknowledge the Palestinian state, SPA added.
 


Saudi crown prince receives world officials after WEF special meeting in Riyadh

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman receives Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Riyadh on Monday. (SPA)
Updated 29 April 2024
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Saudi crown prince receives world officials after WEF special meeting in Riyadh

  • Two-day special meeting of the World Economic Forum ended on Monday

RIYADH: Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman received officials from around the world in Riyadh after a special meeting of the World Economic forum ended on Monday.

The officials included Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, British Foreign Secretary David Cameron, the Prime Minister of Malaysia Anwar Ibrahim, and the Prime Minister of Pakistan Shehbaz Sharif.

The officials attended the two-day special meeting during which the crown prince called for global collaboration to help build a more resilient and integrated global economy. 

Blinken is visiting the Kingdom on his seventh trip to the Middle East since the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel, which responded with a relentless offensive in Gaza that has drawn global criticism.


Saudi Arabia, UNEP launch World Environment Day campaigns

Saudi Minister of Environment, Water, and Agriculture Abdulrahman Al-Fadhli inaugurated the annual event. (SPA)
Updated 29 April 2024
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Saudi Arabia, UNEP launch World Environment Day campaigns

  • Faqeeha noted that on the occasion of World Environment Day, Saudi Arabia will shed light on the urgent need for global investments in conserving nature, restoring lands, and working toward sustainability

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia and the UN Environment Programme have announced campaigns to combat desertification, restore ecosystems, and strengthen drought resilience ahead of World Environment Day celebrations on June 5 in Riyadh.

The announcement was made at the opening of Saudi Arabia’s Environment Week on Sunday, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Saudi Minister of Environment, Water, and Agriculture Abdulrahman Al-Fadhli inaugurated the annual event that aspires to raise awareness of the importance of environmental protection.

Elizabeth Mrema, Deputy executive director, UNEP

During the event, Deputy Minister for Environment Osama Faqeeha emphasized the shared responsibility in addressing land degradation and combating desertification. This responsibility extends to policymakers, the private sector, and civil society organizations globally, who must work together to restore agricultural areas, rehabilitate land, and tackle desertification and drought, he said.

Faqeeha noted that on the occasion of World Environment Day, Saudi Arabia will shed light on the urgent need for global investments in conserving nature, restoring lands, and working toward sustainability.

This year, we are calling on people — from the grassroots to governments — to help tackle the climate and extinction crisis we face by restoring the ground we depend on for survival.

Elizabeth Mrema, Deputy executive director, UNEP

He highlighted the importance of uniting national and international efforts to safeguard and rehabilitate ecosystems across the globe, aiming to fulfill sustainable development objectives.

“Without action, 95 percent of land on Earth could be degraded within the next 30 years, which could spell disaster for humanity and the planet,” said Elizabeth Mrema, deputy executive director of UNEP, launching the global campaign at a Saudi Environment Week event in Riyadh.

“We have seen how previous campaigns have catalyzed climate action across the globe. This year, we are calling on people — from the grassroots to governments — to help tackle the climate and extinction crisis we face by restoring the ground we depend on for survival,” she added.

Countries worldwide have committed to restoring 1 billion hectares of land, aiming to protect 30 percent of land and sea for nature and restoring 30 percent of the planet’s degraded ecosystems.

Supporting the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, World Environment Day 2024 will boost climate action efforts by gathering support for ecosystem restoration.

At the opening event of the Saudi Environment Week, Al-Fadhli emphasized that achieving the goals of environmental protection and conservation of the Kingdom’s natural resources requires active engagement from governmental and private sectors, as well as individuals.

He stressed the significance of adopting eco-friendly behaviors in daily routines and applying these practices across different sectors to reach sustainable development objectives.

“The continuation of this national event annually in the Kingdom reflects our wise leadership’s dedication to environmental protection and commitment to sustainable development, in line with the goals of Saudi Vision 2030,” Al-Fadhli said.

“Moreover, the Kingdom’s dedication to environmental protection is evident at national, regional, and international levels. This is demonstrated by Saudi Arabia’s active participation in numerous environmental agreements and organizations, as well as its … initiatives like the Middle East Green Initiative and other significant global environmental efforts under the G20 umbrella,” he added.