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HOW WIIL UAE BE AFTER 500 YEARS

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Answered by priyankakumarichetri
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Answered by AlantoskoYT
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2020 is a milestone year in many ways for the UAE – the biggest of which is hosting the Expo 2020 in Dubai.

In addition to this, the country’s leaders have planned a lot of things which would alter the landscape of the country in time for the 50th year of the Union in 2021 and beyond.

On the occasion of the 48th National Day, here are a few of the most anticipated developments for next couple of years.

After April in 2021, more than 80 per cent of the Expo-built structures will be retained and repurposed for District 2020.

District 2020 will see the urbanisation of the Expo 2020 site into a smart and sustainable micro city-within-a-city that aims to provide an innovation-driven business ecosystem, while being a diverse and thriving urban community.

District 2020 is curating a diverse mix of tenants that include global corporations, SMEs, and startups, as well as enablers and social and educational platforms. Two of Expo’s Official Premier Partners, Accenture and Siemens, have already committed to establishing a permanent presence in District 2020. Siemens will establish its global headquarters for airports, cargo and ports logistics at the site, while Accenture will open a digital hub.

Dubai Creek Tower - the new tallest tower

Trumping the best-known characteristic of one of the crowning jewels of the country – the Burj Khalifa – the Dubai Creek Tower is set to become the new, record-breaking, tallest building in the world.

Part of the Dubai Creek Harbour project, the observation tower has been designed by Santiago Calatrava and is expected to complete in 2020 in time for the Expo. The tower promises to feature a 360° observation deck featuring spectacular city views.  

One of the oldest aqueduct systems in the UAE dates back 500 years further than first thought, newly uncovered evidence has revealed.

It was originally believed that Falaj Hili 15, in the Hili region of Al Ain, was established in 700BC.

But experts at the Department of Culture and Tourism Abu Dhabi, using information gleaned from excavations previously carried out, now say the site is estimated to have been built in 1200BC, during the Iron Age.

The aqueduct is considered an important discovery because it gives historians and archaeologists a new insight into the inhabitants of the region and their settlements and when they were established.

The Falaj Hili is an intricately designed aqueduct system that allows for water distribution from mountainous areas to inhabited regions.

The water supplies provided by the aqueduct helped to provide valuable freshwater resources for drinking and agricultural irrigation.

Ali Al Meqbali, head of the Al Ain archaeology division, said aqueducts used water from underground aquifers.

Underground channels then allow the passage of water to surface-level tunnels, which then carry water to an open cistern.

This main access point allows for water to be allocated to inhabitants and farmers for irrigation and agricultural development.

Aqueducts and autobahns were smart tech of their day

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Mr Al Meqbali said the aquaducts changed the course of history.

"Initially, inhabitants were scattered in mountainous areas, because during the Bronze Age individuals depended on wells for their water resources," he said.

"However, with the advent of aqueducts, settlement patterns changed and inhabitants dispersed during the Iron Age.

"This also had an impact on production patterns of silt and clay items, including pottery jars used for storage of grains, as well as developing systems that allowed for managing the allocation of water through the falaj."

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