Startup of the Week: The Shed: Perfect spot to meet and greet

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Updated 07 July 2020
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Startup of the Week: The Shed: Perfect spot to meet and greet

  • The cafe offers 150 board games that give the brain a workout and promote healthy competition

Many of us would love to find a cafe that not only offers good food and coffee but the space to complete our projects in a friendly environment.
With this idea in mind The Shed opened its doors last October in Alkhobar. Those who frequent the place consider it a special spot that combines fun with coffee and, in addition, promotes social networking.    
The Shed is a social space that was launched with the idea of renewing the importance of communication and contact among people and allowing them to share fun and interesting activities such as board games, reading, workshops and a room to pursue one’s creative pursuits.
The cafe offers 150 board games that give the brain a workout and promote healthy competition. A reading room allows visitors to enjoy the work of their favorite authors while sipping on world-renowned Arabic coffee. There is a dedicated room for meetings, and creative workshops where people can hold brainstorming sessions. The coloring room at the cafe allows visitors to paint and relax.
Good things, however, do not come for free. People who wish to spend quality time at the cafe have to pay a nominal fee of SR40 ($11), which gives them access to board games for two hours. Game guides are on hand to help visitors choose the right games and understand the rules.
The fee to enter the coloring and drinks rooms is separate. These rooms can be reserved for one person or 12 to enjoy coloring. The Shed also organizes workshops and sessions for arts. Prices to participate in these workshops range between SR99 and SR150.  
Abeer Al-Zubaidi, 30, is a graphic designer and a mother of two. She took her passion and love to create The Shed, along with her husband. The idea for the project started underneath the shed of their house in October 2018, and The Shed came to life a year later.
Al-Zubaidi said: “After we got married and moved from Jeddah we were surprised by the people of the Eastern Province, who prefer to stick to the people they already knew and we lacked an opportunity to expand our acquaintance circle. This is where the idea came from and we were inspired to expand the circle of people who come over to our house every weekend. We called it ‘The Shed’ as the shed is a traditional shaded space, where neighbors used to meet back in the old times, usually made of date palm leaves.”
The idea behind the cafe was to blend the past with the present. The architecture of the place also represented the same idea, as most of its sections are made of palm leaves to give it a traditional Arab touch, she explained.
“We wanted to combine the past with the present in this beautiful space and establish the Arab identity in it. Friends of The Shed are people who are passionate about learning and developing and are looking for an inspiring place to do so. We want to be the shed of every person wishing to develop and educate themselves to benefit society.”
She added that, in light of the precautionary and preventive measures adopted to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, The Shed was closed until the end of the Kingdom’s curfew. The Shed has reopened and is abiding by the requirements of the Health Ministry to ensure everyone’s safety.
“We are committed to taking every visitor’s temperature, wearing face masks, respecting social distancing, receiving a limited number of visitors, disinfecting the place regularly and requiring visitors to pay electronically and wear the gloves provided by The Shed.”


Saudi Arabia celebrates Flag Day with displays, special events

Updated 11 March 2026
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Saudi Arabia celebrates Flag Day with displays, special events

  • Nation goes green in show of unity, belonging
  • Current design of the flag, which represents unity and sovereignty, was adopted in 1937

RIYADH: A new art exhibition has opened at King Abdulaziz Public Library in Riyadh, as the country celebrates Flag Day, which fell on Wednesday.

The event, titled “In Love with Green,” is being held in collaboration with the Saudi Art Association and features 20 fine art paintings inspired by the Saudi flag, as well as other cultural and contemporary images and landmarks.

The current design of the flag, which represents unity and sovereignty, was adopted in 1937. It features the Shahada and a sword symbolizing justice and safety, representing the unification of the Kingdom during the reign of King Abdulaziz Al-Saud.

The exhibition, at the library’s services branch and reading halls on Khurais Road, was opened by the library’s Director General Bandar Al-Mubarak and the association’s board chair Hanaa Al-Shibly.

Visitors can attend from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.

Elsewhere in the country, public spaces and buildings have become a sea of green for Flag Day.

In Al-Baha, government buildings, squares and main roads were decorated with green lighting and national flags were hoisted in public squares.

It was a similar picture in Makkah, where people celebrated the annual show of pride and belonging against a green backdrop.

In Tabuk, authorities installed more than 7,000 flags along roads, squares and bridges, while the region’s landmarks and tunnels were illuminated with green and white lights.

More than 10,000 Saudi flags were also hoisted in Jazan, where Souk Al-Awalin in Jazan City is set to host a range of events and performances to mark the special occasion.