Dubai’s Mall of the Emirates gets makeover for 20th anniversary

Dubai’s Mall of the Emirates, home to the Middle East’s first indoor ski slope alongside its Prada, Dior and Armani boutiques, is heading for a makeover to celebrate its 20th anniversary.

Majid Al Futtaim Holding, owner of the 545-store consumer palace, will plow some $1.4 billion into the mall’s facelift, adding another 100 shops as well as a 600-seat theater, The National reports.

Opened in November 2005 alongside the city’s central traffic artery Sheikh Zayed Road, the glitzy shopping center competes with Emaar’s Dubai Mall, which sits not far away at the bottom of the 163-floor Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest skyscraper.

With a pack of penguins drawing children to Ski Dubai and its 1,300-foot artificial snow-covered slope, Mall of the Emirates counted 40 million visitors in 2025.

Nearly 100 restaurants and cafes, an Apple Store and the country’s biggest movie theater draw city dwellers and foreign tourists to its super air-conditioned galleries to escape the UAE’s stifling heat.

In March, Majid Al Futtaim reported 2024 profit rose 18%, with occupancy at its 29 malls across the region at 97%.

“This continuing transformation, coupled with the region’s strong economic momentum, has positioned Mall of the Emirates as one of the world’s highest-performing malls for leading brands,” Khalifa bin Braik, CEO of Majid Al Futtaim Asset Management, told the newspaper.

The Dubai-based company said this week it plans to launch a $4.7 billion mixed commercial and residential project in Riyadh, with design work underway and construction set to begin in early 2026.

Dubai revamps real estate rules to woo foreign investors

Dubai is taking new steps to make its prime property more attractive to foreign investors.

The emirate issued regulations on Sunday enabling private property owners of all nationalities in the Sheikh Zayed Road and Al Jaddaf areas to convert their ownership to so-called “freehold” status, The National reports.

Under freehold classification, an investor has a direct title of ownership of the property and the land on which it is built.

“This news is huge because it could be the beginning of what I suppose will be the opening up of all areas to be bought by non-locals,” Mario Volpi, head of brokerage at Novvi Properties, told the newspaper.