The first thing you notice is the sound-low and rhythmic, a steady thrum that seems to gather the sky into itself. Standing near the helipad with the sea breeze lifting off Jumeirah Beach, you feel that peculiar mix of anticipation and calm that only travel can conjure. A Helicopter Dubai Jumeirah Beach ride doesn't just show you the city; it rearranges your sense of scale. What had been a skyline of icons and headlines suddenly becomes a living map, a story told in water, glass, and sand.
Strapped into your seat, headset snug over your ears, you watch the rotor's blur become a halo. Lift-off is both gentle and exhilarating, a smooth pull away from the world of footprints and tide lines. The city opens like a book.
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To your right, the Arabian Gulf is a sheet of blue silk, sunlight scattered into a thousand diamonds. To your left, the pale arc of Jumeirah Beach curves away, dotted with umbrellas and parasails, the waves penciling thin white lines along the shore. And just ahead, impossibly poised at the seam of sea and sky, the Burj Al Arab rises like a sail catching a steady wind-something you've seen in countless photographs that somehow still surprises you in person.
From above, Dubai's audacity reveals itself more clearly. Helicopter Dubai al warsan location . The Palm Jumeirah stretches into the water with the clarity of an architect's sketch-the trunk, the broad crescent, and the delicate fronds etched so cleanly that you wonder how they ever felt like rumor rather than reality. The Atlantis sits at the arc of the outer crescent like a palatial clasp, its pink stone casting warm shadows across the water. Past the Palm, the curve of Bluewaters Island and the circle of Ain Dubai mark the horizon with geometric confidence, while the towers of Dubai Marina and JBR rise like a stone forest-varied, intricate, and unashamedly vertical.
The pilot's voice, calm and practiced, filters through your headset, pointing out landmarks and angles you might have missed. There's the trace of Sheikh Zayed Road, a steel ribbon threading through the heart of the city. There's the gleam of new developments, the precise geometry of marinas and lagoons, and far inland, slim and silver, the Burj Khalifa piercing the haze with a quiet certainty. The helicopter banks and the city tilts, revealing another layer-mosques with elegant minarets tucked among villas, the occasional patch of green parkland, and the toned symmetry of beach clubs that from the ground feel spacious but from here look like tiny dioramas.
Yet the most striking part is the union of opposites. Dubai is often described in superlatives-tallest, largest, most-but from the air it feels less like boasting and more like conversation. The desert meets the sea; old dhows in Dubai Creek share the day with yachts in spotless marinas; traditional courtyards rest within a short flight of glass-walled lobbies. Heritage and modernity, sand and surf, scale and subtlety-everything coexists in a composition you can only fully grasp with this vantage point.
Time behaves differently in the air. Minutes expand as your eye gathers detail: the wake of a speedboat carving an arrowhead into the water; the way a hotel's shadow lengthens toward the beach; the pale streak where a jet-ski draws a cursive line on a calm morning. Photographs are irresistible-Dubai has a way of tilting every composition toward the iconic-but there's a case for putting the camera down, too. The sound of the rotors, the way the helicopter shivers lightly in crosswinds, the bench-seat camaraderie among strangers become part of the story you'll recount later.
If you choose a morning flight, the light is crisp, colors truer, the sea an honest blue. By midday, heat shimmer softens edges, turning towers into strokes of bright watercolor. Sunset is the city's most theatrical habit: the Gulf turns bronze, glass catches fire, and for a few minutes the Burj Al Arab and Palm seem to glow from within. There's romance in that hour, but there's clarity in the earlier ones-the kind of clarity that reminds you how precisely everything here has been imagined and executed.
Safety briefings, weight checks, headsets-the logistics of a helicopter ride are reassuringly structured. Tours over Jumeirah Beach and the coast are well-practiced, flown by experienced pilots who trace familiar arcs through controlled airspace. You'll learn small, practical things: dark clothing cuts down window reflections for photos; a hair tie keeps long hair out of the rotor's breeze; sunglasses help you read the color of the water beneath the glare. The ride is surprisingly smooth, more glide than jolt, and for most people any nervousness falls away in the face of the view.
In a city known for excess, what's striking about a helicopter tour is its economy.
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In fifteen or twenty minutes, you take in a geography that would cost you days to stitch together at ground level. You understand the Palm as a coherent shape rather than a sequence of intersections.
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You see how Jumeirah Beach frames the urban core like a clean underline. You grasp, viscerally, why people describe Dubai as a place of edges-where the built world insists itself right to the line where land becomes sea.
And then, almost as quickly as it began, you're descending, the helipad expanding beneath you, the rotors scribbling the air. The return to earth is gentle. Helicopter Dubai safe tour The headset comes off, the door slides open, and the smell of salt and sunscreen rushes back in. The beach is right there again, familiar, human-scale-children chasing waves, joggers trading strides with their reflections on wet sand-but something has shifted. You carry a map in your head now, and with it, a changed relationship to the city. What was once a set of famous silhouettes is now a living place stitched together by water and road, ambition and light.
A Helicopter Dubai Jumeirah Beach ride leaves you with more than a highlight reel. It leaves you with context, which is a rarer souvenir. You'll still pose with your photos-Palm fronds like a living emblem beneath your lens, the sail-shaped hotel cutting its crisp profile against the Gulf-but the memory that lasts is the sensation of hovering between elements, seeing a city that never stops being itself from a perspective that never stops being extraordinary.
About Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque
Mosque in Abu Dhabi, the U.A.E.
"Sheikh Zayed Mosque" redirects here. For other uses, see Sheikh Zayed Mosque (disambiguation).
Location within the Middle East
Show map of Middle East
Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque
جَامِع ٱلشَّيْخ زَايِد ٱلْكَبِيْر
View of the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque from the courtyard, 2018
Religion
Affiliation
Islam
Location
Location
Abu Dhabi
Country
United Arab Emirates
Location within the UAE
Show map of United Arab Emirates
Coordinates24°24′43.2″N54°28′26.4″E / 24.412000°N 54.474000°E / 24.412000; 54.474000ArchitectureArchitectYusef AbdelkiStyleIslamicGroundbreaking1996Completed2007Construction costDhs2 billion (US$545 million)SpecificationsCapacity41,000+Length420 m (1,380 ft)Width290 m (950 ft)Dome82 domes of 7 different sizesDome height (outer)85 m (279 ft)Dome dia. (outer)32.2 m (106 ft)Minaret4Minaret height104 m (341 ft)Website
مركز جامع الشيخ زايد الكبير
The Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque (Arabic: جَامِع ٱلشَّيْخ زَايِد ٱلْكَبِيْرJāmiʿ Aš-Šaykh Zāyid Al-Kabīr) is a mosque located in Abu Dhabi, the capital city of the United Arab Emirates.[1] It is the country's largest mosque, and is the key place of worship for daily Islamic prayers. There is a smaller replica of this mosque in Surakarta, a city in Indonesia.[2]
The Grand Mosque was constructed between 1994 and 2007 and was inaugurated in December 2007.[3] The building complex measures approximately 290 by 420 m (950 by 1,380 ft), covering an area of more than 12 hectares (30 acres), excluding exterior landscaping and vehicle parking. The main axis of the building is rotated about 12° south of true west, aligning it in the direction of the Kaaba in Mecca, Saudi Arabia.
The project was launched by the late president of the U.A.E., Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, who wanted to establish a structure that would unite the cultural diversity of the Islamic world with the historical and modern values of architecture and art.[4] In 2004, Sheikh Zayed died and was buried in the courtyard of the mosque.
Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque Center (SZGMC) offices are located in the west minarets. SZGMC manages the day-to-day operations and serves as a center of learning and discovery through its educational cultural activities and visitor programs. The library, located in the northeast minaret, serves the community with classic books and publications addressing a range of Islamic subjects: sciences, civilization, calligraphy, the arts, and coins, including some rare publications. The collection comprises material in a broad range of languages, including Arabic, English, French, Italian, Spanish, German, and Korean. For two years running, it was voted the world's second favourite landmark by TripAdvisor.[5]
The Grand Mosque has been a significant destination for visiting foreign leaders during official state visits to the UAE. Notable visitors include Elizabeth II,[6] the then US Vice President Joe Biden[7] and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.[8]
Design and construction
[edit]
The mosque was built under the guidance and supervision of Sheikh Zayed, who was buried here after his death in 2004. It features 82 domes, more than 1,000 columns, 24-carat-gold gilded chandeliers and the world's largest hand-knotted carpet. The main prayer hall is dominated by one of the largest chandeliers. The mosque was designed under the management of the Syrian architect Youssef Abdelke, and three other architectural designers from Syria who completed the design and worked on developing it, Basem Barghouti, Moataz Al-Halabi, and Imad Malas.[9]
The mosque's architect Yusef Abdelki took inspiration from a number of sources: the Abu al-Abbas al-Mursi Mosque in Alexandria, designed by Mario Rossi in the 1920s;[10] the Badshahi Mosque in Lahore, Pakistan;[11] and other references of Persian, Mughal, and Indo-Islamic architecture. The dome layout and floorplan of the mosque was inspired by the Badshahi Mosque. Its archways are quintessentially Moorish, and its minarets classically Arab.
In a joint-venture between Italian contractors Impregilo and Rizzani de Eccher, more than 3,000 workers and 38 sub-contracting companies were conscripted in its construction. The mosque was completed under a second contract by a Joint Venture between ACC and Six Construct (part of Belgian company BESIX Group) between 2004 and 2007.[12][13][14] Natural materials were chosen for much of its design and construction due to their long-lasting qualities, including marble stone, gold, semi-precious stones, crystals and ceramics. Artisans and materials came from many countries including Syria, especially from Damascus and Aleppo, and some other countries such as India, Italy, Germany, Turkey, Pakistan, Malaysia, Iran, China, United Kingdom, New Zealand, North Macedonia and the U.A.E.[citation needed] The intricate flower mosaics decorating the courtyard was designed by the British artist Kevin Dean, who embraced Sheikh Zayed’s passionate vision to create a mosque that unites the world, as he chose flowers from the Middle East, such as Tulips, Lilys, and Irises. As inlays of colored marble form exuberant floral patterns that curl and twist gracefully from the edges towards the center adorn the courtyard. While the rest of the Sahan was inlaid with thousands of small pieces of white marble.
Dimensions and statistics
[edit]
The mosque is large enough to accommodate over 40,100 worshippers, while the main prayer hall can hold over 7,000. There are two smaller prayer halls, with a capacity of 1,500 each, one of which is the women's prayer hall.[1]
There are four minarets on the four corners of the courtyard which rise about 107 m (351 ft) in height. The courtyard, with its floral design, measures about 17,000 m2 (180,000 sq ft), and is considered to be the largest example of marble mosaic in the world.[1] The exterior and interior are adorned with white marble, giving the mosque a serene and majestic appearance. The marble is inlaid with precious stones like lapis lazuli, carnelian, amethyst, abalone shell, and mother of pearl.
Marble used in the construction included:
Sivec from Prilep, North Macedonia was used on the external cladding (115,119 m2 (1,239,130 sq ft) of cladding has been used on the mosque, including the minarets)
Lasa from Laas, South Tyrol, Italy was used in the internal elevations
Makrana from Makrana, India was used in the annexes and offices
Acquabianca and Bianco P from Italy
East White and Ming Green from China[1]
To compare, the King Faisal Mosque of Sharjah, formerly the largest mosque in Sharjah[15] and country, measures 10,000–12,000 m2 (110,000–130,000 sq ft).[16][17]
Architectural features
[edit]
The carpet in the hall is considered by many [by whom?] to be the world's largest carpet made by Iran's Carpet Company and designed by Iranian artist Ali Khaliqi.[18] It measures 5,627 m2 (60,570 sq ft), and was made by around 1,200-1,300 carpet knotters. The weight of this carpet is 35 ton and is predominantly made from wool (originating from New Zealand and Iran). There are 2,268,000,000 knots within the carpet and it took approximately two years to complete.[1]
Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque Chandelier
The Grand Mosque has seven imported chandeliers from the company Faustig in Munich, Germany that incorporate millions of Swarovski crystals. The largest chandelier is the second largest known chandelier inside a mosque, the third largest in the world,[clarification needed] and has a 10 m (33 ft) diameter and a 15 m (49 ft) height.[1]
The pools along the arcades reflect the mosque's columns, which become illuminated at night. The unique lighting system was designed by lighting architects Speirs and Major Associates to reflect the phases of the moon. Beautiful bluish gray clouds are projected in lights onto the external walls and get brighter and darker according to the phase of the moon.[19]
The 96 columns in the main prayer hall are clad with marble and inlaid with mother of pearl, one of the few places where one can see this craftsmanship.[citation needed]
The 99 names (qualities or attributes) of God (Allah) are featured on the Qibla wall in traditional Kufic calligraphy, designed by the prominent UAE calligrapher — Mohammed Mandi Al Tamimi. The Qibla wall also features subtle fibre-optic lighting, which is integrated as part of the organic design.
In total, three calligraphy styles — Naskhi, Thuluth and Kufic — are used throughout the mosque and were drafted by Mohammed Mandi Al Tamimi of the UAE, Farouk Haddad of Syria and Mohammed Allam of Jordan.[1]
View from Wahat Al Karama
Exterior
Water mirror and columns
Inner courtyard with minaret
Interior of the main prayer hall
The mosque in 2022
The mosque at night
Outside of the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque (left)
Mosque walkway
Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque At Night
See also
[edit]
List of mosques in the United Arab Emirates
List of cultural property of national significance in the United Arab Emirates
Qasr Al Watan
The Founder's Memorial
Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque
Sheikh Zayed Mosque, Fujairah
Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan's Mosque in Stockholm, Sweden
Emir Abdelkader Mosque
References
[edit]
^ abcdefg
"Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque in Abu Dhabi". www.szgmc.ae.
^"President Sheikh Mohamed attends inauguration of Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque in Indonesia: Mosque is almost identical to the original in Abu Dhabi". The National. 2022-11-14. Retrieved 2022-11-15.
^"Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque". Abu Dhabi Government. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
^"Sheikh Zayed Mosque, Abu Dhabi". Wondermondo.
^The National staff (27 May 2017). "Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque ranked the world's second favourite landmark | The National". Retrieved 28 May 2017.
^"The Queen's visit to the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque", gov.uk, retrieved 2025-04-16
^"AP", newsroom.ap.org, retrieved 2024-10-04
^"PM Modi Visits Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque in Abu Dhabi". NDTV.com. Retrieved 2024-10-04.
^"9 Most Famous Buildings in Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Sharjah That Put the UAE on the World Map". AD Middle East. 2023-12-02. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
^"7 Facts You Must Know About Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque". MSN News. 12 March 2021.
^Vanessa Chiasson (15 November 2019). "8 Of The Most Beautiful Places In Abu Dhabi". Travel Awaits.
^"Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque". Accsal. Retrieved 13 March 2019.
^"Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque Marbled architectural splendor". Besix. Retrieved 13 March 2019.
^"Infrastructure boost". Gulf Construction Online. 2004-08-01.
^"A look at the magnificent mosques of the UAE". Khaleej Times. 2015-07-01. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
^Al Qassemi, Sultan Sooud (2017-11-16). "Demystifying Sharjah's iconic King Faisal Mosque". Gulf News. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
^Kakande, Yasin (2011-08-11). "Sharjah's mosque where the faithful can listen and learn". The National. Sharjah. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
^"Iran weaves world's largest carpet". Web India 123. 2007-07-28.
^Marinho, Carlos André (2023-10-21). "Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque". MuseumsOnTheRoad.com. Retrieved 2025-12-04.
External links
[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sheikh Zayed Mosque.
The Official Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque Center website
The Official Abu Dhabi Tourism Authority website
Shah, Pino (2020-03-14). Rood, Carrie (compiler) (ed.). Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque: Heaven's Waiting Room. Vol. 1 (of World Heritage Series). Pharr, Texas, the U.S.A.: ArtByPino.com. ISBN 978-0-9979-9844-3. Retrieved 2020-07-09.
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About Jumeirah
For the hotel chain, see Jumeirah (hotel chain).
Community in Emirate of Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Jumeirah (Arabic: جُمَيْرَا, romanized: Jumayrā Emirati pronunciation: [dʒʊˈmeːrɐ]) is a coastal residential area of Dubai, United Arab Emirates mainly comprising low rise private dwellings and hotel developments. It has both large expensive detached properties and more modest town houses built in a variety of architectural styles. The area is popular with expatriates working in Dubai and is familiar to many visiting tourists.
History
[edit]
See also: History of the United Arab Emirates and List of Ancient Settlements in the UAE
Majlis Ghorfat Umm Al Sheif (مَجْلِس غُرْفَة أُمّ ٱلشَّيْف)
Archaeological excavations at Jumeirah Archaeological Site,[2][3][4] which was discovered in 1969, demonstrate that the area was inhabited as far back as the Abbasid era, approximately in the 10th century CE. Measuring about 80,000 m2 (860,000 sq ft), the site lay along a caravan route linking India and China to Oman and Iraq.[2][3][4]
Historically, Emirati people living in Jumeirah were fishermen, pearl divers and traders. At the turn of the 20th century, it was a village of some 45 areesh (palm leaf) huts, inhabited mainly by settled Bedouin of the Bani Yas and Manasir tribes. At the time, Jumeirah was 'about 3 miles southwest of Dibai town'.[5]
In modern times (1960 onwards), Jumeirah was the principal area for western expatriate residences. The beachfront area was previously called "Chicago Beach",[6] as the site of the former Chicago Beach Hotel.[7] The locale's peculiar name had its origins in the Chicago Bridge & Iron Company which at one time welded giant floating oil storage tankers called "Kazzans" on the site.[6] The old name persisted for a time after the old hotel was demolished in 1997. "Dubai Chicago Beach Hotel" was the Public Project Name for the construction phase of the Burj Al Arab Hotel until Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum announced the new name: Burj Al Arab.[7]
The Theatre of Digital Art (ToDA) opened in 2020 at Souk Madinat in Jumeirah as an exhibition space for digital art.[8]
See also
[edit]
United Arab Emirates portal
Jumeirah Beach
Jumeirah Beach Hotel
Jumeira Baccalaureate School
Palm Jumeirah
Jumeirah Mosque
City Walk
References
[edit]
^https://www.dsc.gov.ae/en-us/EServices/Pages/geo-stat.aspx. Dubai Statistics Center
^ ab
Al Amir, Khitam; Cherian, Dona (2020-01-09). "Look: Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid visits Jumeirah Archaeological Site". Gulf News. Retrieved 2020-01-12.
Awesome Helicopter tour of Dubai and the world Islands. We got to see everything we wanted to see. Tour left on time and everything was very organized.
I recently had the pleasure of taking a helicopter ride with your company, and I wanted to take a moment to share my experience.
From start to finish, everything was exceptionally well-organized. The views during the ride were absolutely breathtaking, and the pilot's professionalism and knowledge added so much to the overall experience. It was clear that safety was a top priority, which made me feel comfortable and secure throughout the flight.
The only suggestion I have for improvement would be [less timing of the ride] However, this did not detract from what was an otherwise fantastic experience.
Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed the ride, and I would highly recommend it to others. Thank you for providing such a memorable experience!
Helicopter Ride and Tours Dubai, Al Warsan Building - near Media Rotana, Ground Floor - Al Thanyah First - Barsha Heights - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Helicopter Ride and Tours Dubai, Al Warsan Building - near Media Rotana, Ground Floor - Al Thanyah First - Barsha Heights - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Helicopter Ride and Tours Dubai, Al Warsan Building - near Media Rotana, Ground Floor - Al Thanyah First - Barsha Heights - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Helicopter Ride and Tours Dubai, Al Warsan Building - near Media Rotana, Ground Floor - Al Thanyah First - Barsha Heights - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Helicopter Ride and Tours Dubai, Al Warsan Building - near Media Rotana, Ground Floor - Al Thanyah First - Barsha Heights - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Helicopter Ride and Tours Dubai, Al Warsan Building - near Media Rotana, Ground Floor - Al Thanyah First - Barsha Heights - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Helicopter Ride and Tours Dubai, Al Warsan Building - near Media Rotana, Ground Floor - Al Thanyah First - Barsha Heights - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Helicopter Ride and Tours Dubai, Al Warsan Building - near Media Rotana, Ground Floor - Al Thanyah First - Barsha Heights - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Helicopter Ride and Tours Dubai, Al Warsan Building - near Media Rotana, Ground Floor - Al Thanyah First - Barsha Heights - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Helicopter Ride and Tours Dubai, Al Warsan Building - near Media Rotana, Ground Floor - Al Thanyah First - Barsha Heights - Dubai - United Arab Emirates