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Rosewood has signed a management agreement with The Red Sea Development Company for a new luxury resort in Saudi Arabia. Located along Saudi Arabia’s west coast on Shura Island, the new Rosewood hotel will open as part of phase one of the multi-complex Red Sea development. The Red Sea destination, located 550 km north of Jeddah, will comprise of a marina, yacht club, numerous hotels, commercial retail and dining options, as well as an 18-hole championship golf course.
Source: https://www.travelnewsasia.com/news22/275-RosewoodRedSea.shtml & https://www.hoteliermiddleeast.com/The Rosewood Red Sea will feature 149 guest rooms and suites, three restaurants, two lounges, event pavilions, a spa with seven treatment rooms, a gym, two movement studios and a yoga pavilion.
Encompassing 22 islands and five inland sites by the time it completes in 2030, The Red Sea destination will be home to a luxury and upper-upscale segment composed of mono-island resorts, beach resorts, centralized island-hubs, and inland resorts in the desert and mountains.
Last edited by ResortsAhoy; 28 May 2022 at 01:14 PM.
Saudi Arabia’s The Red Sea Project has unveiled its first branded residences. Residences make up one-eighth of the project’s development, with 8,000 hotel rooms and 1,000 residential keys by 2030. Nujuma, A Ritz-Carlton Reserve has been confirmed for The Red Sea Development Company’s (TRSDC) destination. A landmark announcement for Marriott, Nujuma marks the brand’s debut in the region and the fifth property in the brand globally.
Nujuma will be situated on a pristine set of private islands, which are part of the Red Sea’s Blue Hole cluster of islands. Surrounded by natural beauty and designed to blend with the environment, the resort is expected to feature 63 one to four bedroom water and beach villas. Plans also include a range of amenities and exceptional services including a spa, swimming pools, multiple culinary venues, a retail area and a variety of other leisure and entertainment offerings including a Conservation Center.Source: https://www.hoteliermiddleeast.com/saudi-arabia/red-sea-project-residencesNotably, the property has confirmed to include 18 Ritz-Carlton Reserve branded residences. This is the first confirmation of residential units at the destination.
Saudi Arabia's Red Sea project plans to build 50 luxury hotels by 2030.
Six Senses and St Regis hotels will be the first to open, and guests will be welcomed already from the beginning of 2023. These will be followed by EDITION, Fairmont, Raffles, SLS, Grand Hyatt, Intercontinental Hotels and Resorts and Jumeirah.
The gateway to the Red Sea Project will be Shurayrah Island, where Foster + Partners is designing a hub called Coral Bloom to accommodate the debut hotels. Part of an archipelago of 90 islands, just 22 of them will be developed, meaning 75 per cent of them will be protected. The destination also features desert dunes, mountain canyons, dormant volcanoes, and ancient cultural and heritage sites.The first phase of the Red Sea Project is due to be completed by the end of 2023, with a total of 16 hotels offering 3,000 hotel rooms on five islands and two inland sites. It will also include a luxury marina, an 18-hole golf course, leisure and entertainment facilities, and an international airport that will be accessible to 80 percent of the world's population in less than eight hours and is expected to serve up to one million passengers per year by 2030.By 2030, the Red Sea Project expects to host one million visitors annually (capped in line with its sustainability ambitions), creating upwards of 70,000 new jobs and contributing US$5.3 billion to the nation’s GDP once fully operational.
Upon completion of the project in 2030, the site will host 50 hotels offering up to 8,000 hotel rooms and around 1,000 residential properties across 22 islands and six inland areas.
Link: https://globetrender.com/2022/04/21/saudi-arabia-red-sea-project-regenerative-tourism/
The Red Sea project is going to operate all tourist facilities on biofuel, according to the Saudi Press Agency.
Source: https://www.arabnews.com/node/2067161/business-economyTRSDC has chosen the German firm MAN Energy Solutions to supply it with 25 sets of biofuel generators with a total production capacity of 112 MW.
The tourist destination will rely on renewable energy supplies, like solar plants that will include storage batteries powered by MAN gensets in six different locations. If solar energy isn’t available, there will be biofuel running on generator sets.
Source: https://www.theredsea.sa/en/media-center/news“The importance of the Red Sea destination lies in its support for the economic diversification strategy pursued by Saudi Arabia by providing job opportunities, encouraging entrepreneurship, and attracting local and foreign investments in the Kingdom, as part of Vision 2030”
LONGi, a key Chinese solar technology company, has announced that it has been awarded a contract to supply 406MW of its Hi-MO 5 bifacial modules to the SepcoIII Electric Power Construction Company towards development of Saudi Arabia's Red Sea Project.The Red Sea Development Company (TRSDC), the developer behind the world's most ambitious regenerative tourism project, awarded its highest-value contract to date to a consortium led by Acwa Power to design, build, operate and transfer the project's utilities infrastructure, generating up to 650,000 MWh of CO2 free power.
The CO2 emissions saved are the equivalent of some half a million tons annually. Included in the package is the world's largest battery storage facility of 1000MWh, which will allow the destination to remain completely off-grid and powered by renewables day and night.
Source: http://www.tradearabia.com/news/CONS_395249.htmlThe agreement also covers the construction of three seawater reverse osmosis (SWRO) plants, designed to provide clean drinking water, a solid waste management center and an innovative sewage treatment plant (STP) that is expected to allow waste to be managed in a way that enhances the environment, by creating new wetland habitats and supplementing the venue with irrigation water for landscaping.