Why Egypt Is Building a New Capital City

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  • čas přidán 12. 12. 2021
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    Egypt is building a new capital city right in the middle of the desert. But why are they doing this and why would they choose this unfavorable landscape outside of Cairo in the sahara desert for the project?
    Select video clips courtesy of Getty Images
    Map source by MapTiler / OpenStreetMap Contributors via Geolayers 3
    Thanks to Doug Barnard for allowing me to use his footage.
    Check out his video on this topic:
    • I Went to Egypt's New ...
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Komentáře • 11K

  • @TetraDax
    @TetraDax Před 2 lety +4519

    One of the worries for me in this plan is that they are bound to create another traffic nightmare: The seperation of residential areas from commercial areas. If you give people the opportunity to walk to work or walk to the shops, they will do it. That has been proven over and over again. But if you force people to drive by only offering flats/houses far away from their place of work, traffic will become a problem eventually. You can somewhat counteract that problem with good public transport, but even the best public transport will not fix bad city design.

    • @MrR5000
      @MrR5000 Před 2 lety +159

      You can solve that with proper and cheap public transport.

    •  Před 2 lety +456

      Agree. This planning seems a logistical nightmare. They may have been influenced by whatever country they want, but in reality the separation between areas is massive. Hope I'm wrong but it seems bound to be a Dubai x2. Souless, a painful place to live and expensive. Not to mention that why the hell does anyone need a 1km skyscrapper with so much land available.

    • @TetraDax
      @TetraDax Před 2 lety +151

      @@MrR5000 Only to a degree. There will always be many who simply do not want to use public transport, especially in a nations capital where many rich folks and politicians will inevitably live. The solution to traffic is NOT to offer better alternatives to the car - It is to not even make the car a viable option anymore, keep most journeys walkable.

    • @seeranos
      @seeranos Před 2 lety +84

      @@MrR5000 the more spread out things are, the more expensive transit is, and the less viable those cheap low impact transit options are (think biking and walking). This means cities can’t incrementally improve their infrastructure, they have to take out huge loans to build everything out at once, which always leads to a transit system which isn’t well adapted to where people actually want to go. This leads to people driving all the time

    • @tyronemarchant2589
      @tyronemarchant2589 Před 2 lety +15

      Elon Musks tunnels should be added, haha

  • @amirtarek6140
    @amirtarek6140 Před 2 lety +3586

    You should have added that the new city is going to be between to Suez canal and Cairo. Also, the new capital city will be linked with the metro, monorail, and a High-speed railway.

    • @gitgut4977
      @gitgut4977 Před 2 lety +43

      a city has to have a certain density to generate ridership in public transport at a reasonable price!

    • @medotalabe
      @medotalabe Před 2 lety +187

      @@gitgut4977 that’s bs because all of these transportation modes are not to “create ridership” to the new capital but to actually facilitate the movement of people between the populous cities in the Nile valley and the Suez Canal Special economic zone with all its surrounding manufacturing cities so that it facilitates creating jobs in the process and lift millions out of poverty. So we are following the Chinese model, in the future this new capital is bound to be fully populated because of its strategic location in a huge economic corridor connecting the Mediterranean and the red seas.

    • @sm3675
      @sm3675 Před 2 lety +74

      Cairo NEEDS more subways. It's so packed.

    • @realname4898
      @realname4898 Před 2 lety +7

      This guy said it all and it didn't even take the minimal amount of time to get flagged for being paiid. You're a Saint

    • @dankschang
      @dankschang Před 2 lety +10

      I am scratching my head...it will place the nation in danger from the sky...like telling your enemies...bom here if you are angry with me.

  • @heatherjones6647
    @heatherjones6647 Před 2 lety +1344

    Spent 4 days in Cairo in November 2018. Uninhabited apartment block buildings everywhere, most without glass in the windows. It was explained to me that purchasers/lessees were expected to buy the glass and appliances, etc. themselves. As far as I could see, then, many buildings had barely 50% occupancy. I don't, therefore, see the whole "housing shortage" issue. It looks like corrupt builders have been able to secure permissions with no oversight or reference to any kind of zoning or other planning regs. and have built willy-nilly all over the city. The massive grinding poverty in which the vast majority of the population lives makes such spaces unattainable and the shoddy construction means the middle classes don't want them. So much easier for elites to head out to the desert, build their own utopia, and let Cairo go to the starving dogs, cats, donkeys, people, and oblivious tourists. Nothing on the images you provide shows where the slaves on whose backs most of this will run are to live. Also, who is paying for all this? Has Egypt become progressive and gone for a tax the rich self-financing scheme or are the poor and middles classes shouldering a deeply unfair tax burden while the corrupt government goes heavily in debt to "whom"???? Reminds me of Greece just after joining the EU/euro. The generals and their cronies made out like bandits on all the loans and now ordinary Greeks have been suffering for 12 years and will keep on suffering for another decade at least. The average citizen of Cairo or rural Egypt will never see inside any of those facilities or benefit in the least from "the tallest building in Africa".

    • @prawjeke
      @prawjeke Před rokem +148

      I totally agree. There are only two ways something like this works: incredible wealth, unity, and cooperation- or tyrannical slave labour. I guess Egypt really is resurrecting old traditions…

    • @MoReal2
      @MoReal2 Před rokem +32

      Here is the thing : the government published the master plan on the desert, land have zero value, then pledges to build the infrastructure and the land become worthy of investment..so then government sells huge plots to private real estate developers and then use the money to build the promised infrastructure and low cost housing mainly to house poor people who live in slums on long term subsidized cheap loans.

    • @Peglegkickboxer
      @Peglegkickboxer Před rokem +31

      @@MoReal2 Right but Egypt does not have any serious tourism except brief visits to the pyramids and the local population only makes like $130 a week. What are these real-estate companies going to do to make profit? Not to mention that they are trying to out do Dubai with less slave labour, no serious oil money or control over the global oil market, and while actively in a water shortage (soon war).

    • @michaelstevens8073
      @michaelstevens8073 Před rokem

      @@MoReal2 Why not just invest the billions of dollars into infrastructure and poverty in their current capital, that has access to the pyramids? Just seems like a dick measuring contest for oligarchs.

    • @MoReal2
      @MoReal2 Před rokem +27

      @@Peglegkickboxer not sure where you are getting your info from, but Egypt is a popular tourist destination for British, Germans, Italians and Russians. Cairo was already overcrowded with many slums in the old town occupying central cairo. This project is a master move by the gov as they get to stimulate the economy with private money, while moving poor people from slums into affordable low cost hosing for free while solving congestion problems too.
      Egypt is not trying to out do dubai...Dubai real estate is intended for luxury buyers while Egypts real estate market is driven by internal demand..there are 5 to 6 million Egyptian expatriates in the gulf countries alone and they will def buy into this project..
      Plus, Egypt have a diverse economy unlike the gulf countries which relies solely on revenues from oil and gas..

  • @micesserono2966
    @micesserono2966 Před rokem +1371

    To summarize :
    1. They have too much traffic but instead of developing public transportation they build more roads and a new city centre.
    2. They have a systemic water shortage and will solve it by building a city in the desert.
    Great plans, good luck Egypt!

    • @blackknight4996
      @blackknight4996 Před rokem +1

      I think since you are illiterate, you don't need to know more.

    • @ahmedelnokrashi8324
      @ahmedelnokrashi8324 Před rokem +61

      Regarding the first point
      They aren't solving traffic problems with developing more roads and the new capital will have accessible public transportation
      In cairo we are expanding metro lines,monroals and building a new railway same with the capital,we don't have much cars problem is that more than 22 million of us live in cairo,density is extreme .
      Regarding 2nd point I agree with it,I have no clue how we are gonna irrigate it

    • @HTProducer
      @HTProducer Před rokem +62

      @@ahmedelnokrashi8324 Egypt with 100M inhabitants cannot rely anymore only on the Nile river even without the Ethiopian dam, the only solution is water desalination and a more severe birth control. 100M in the desert is insane

    • @ahmedelnokrashi8324
      @ahmedelnokrashi8324 Před rokem +15

      @@HTProducer I am aware of that that is why I said I have no idea how he is gonna supply a man made river a park 6× central park plus different plantings and neighbourhood parks

    • @salmamustafa9838
      @salmamustafa9838 Před rokem +1

      @@HTProducer EGYPT IS NOT A DESERT🙄 🏜️😡

  • @patrickgaribay6135
    @patrickgaribay6135 Před 2 lety +4681

    My only question is how is this gonna solve the water shortage? Making a city with an artificial river in the desert certainly won’t help🤔

    • @brianhalps
      @brianhalps Před 2 lety +576

      There is a very interesting plan in place that would put nuclear powerplants and desalinization plants in the South of Israel underground and Israel would share the energy and water with Jordan Saudi Arabia and Egypt. But most Egyptians are not in favor of this plan because they hate Israel. The countries that agree to the plan would gain huge strategic advantages.

    • @kaisersaltyvonsaltenburg3298
      @kaisersaltyvonsaltenburg3298 Před 2 lety +1414

      @@brianhalps Huge strategic advantages like being totally dependent on your greatest enemy.
      Sounds good.

    • @MDFification1
      @MDFification1 Před 2 lety +602

      @@kaisersaltyvonsaltenburg3298 Egypt and Israel have no competing geopoltiical interests. The only reason they've been at odds is Egypt's sympathy for the Palestinians, which with Pan-Arabism and Pan-Islamism increasingly disfavoured by the Egyptian establishment, is less of a factor now. Egypt and Israel are today de-facto allies, supporting each other's plans for economic development and cooperating to resist Turkish attempts to dominate the eastern Mediterranean.
      Of course, if Egypt were to become an actual democracy at some point, and the will of the Egyptian people started to factor into Egypt's foreign policy, this could change very rapidly.

    • @johnboz8087
      @johnboz8087 Před 2 lety +99

      @@MDFification1 Turkey 🇹🇷 should be the role model not Israel for Egypt

    • @lif6737
      @lif6737 Před 2 lety +194

      @@kaisersaltyvonsaltenburg3298 Egypt can only gain by increasing cooperation with Israel. Many can easily argue that supporting Palestine is a moral obligation, but Egypt won't realistically affect change, and by treating Israel with hostility it will only set itself back in the Arab world. The Arab nations quickest to betray the Palestinian cause will become the leaders of the Arab world, even if they are hated for it.

  • @MsEclectic
    @MsEclectic Před 2 lety +6767

    I hope the new city is pedestrian friendly. New cities have the chance to move away from relying heavily on cars hence reducing traffic, noise and pollution. Just hope they grab that chance. I’ve visited Dubai on many occasions and you can’t get from one neighbourhood to another without hitting a motorway. It would be great to see more thought, innovation and flair put into designing this new city.

    • @VincentGonzalezVeg
      @VincentGonzalezVeg Před 2 lety +83

      Like roadway is used to be where foot traffic happened
      We didn't lose the need for that much space to walk

    • @penguinpingu3807
      @penguinpingu3807 Před 2 lety +810

      Sadly it looks like its going to be car dependent.
      With the amount of highways.
      And how spread out the services are.

    • @abomoaaz7245
      @abomoaaz7245 Před 2 lety +105

      @@penguinpingu3807 There are smart mass transportation, and the large areas will be gardens and a green outlet to help cool the atmosphere in the summer. The city is expected to accommodate nearly ten million citizens. There must be a place in the design for the future. And everything is planned, even if they want to make a trolleybus or a frequency bus, its place will be ready

    • @penguinpingu3807
      @penguinpingu3807 Před 2 lety +265

      @@abomoaaz7245 I think a metro would be more feasible as for a city expecting to accommodate 10 million people. As a metro is able to move people in a larger capacity. And it won't disturb or even get stuck on traffic. But buses or tollybuses are better than nothing I suppose. I hope Egypt will have a bright future. (And I actually meant it.)

    • @kilojuliet2693
      @kilojuliet2693 Před 2 lety +59

      to be fair you can't just be walking in dubai lmao

  • @alexandrostsiompanidis2543
    @alexandrostsiompanidis2543 Před 2 lety +172

    Wish all the best to our ancient brothers, much love from Greece! 🇬🇷❤️🇪🇬

    • @1Light14
      @1Light14 Před 2 lety +10

      Thanks dude it's really heartwarming to see such a nice comment from someone at Greece Greece us Egyptians may god bring peace and blessings to your land my friend

    • @gumballsbrotheriforgothisn5263
      @gumballsbrotheriforgothisn5263 Před 2 lety +2

      @@1Light14 that is one good dad joke you pulled right there my friend

    • @mohameddarwish255
      @mohameddarwish255 Před 2 lety +7

      Thanks bro, Greeks, and Egyptians are like honey and sugar, they're both sweet! ❤❤❤

    • @m4zeng4mer67
      @m4zeng4mer67 Před 2 lety

      @@gumballsbrotheriforgothisn5263 Gumball's brother is "Darwin"

    • @carlossilva-un4gr
      @carlossilva-un4gr Před rokem

      There is a huge difference between a master and a brother, Greeks came here to learn and we gave you knowledge and that's it we are not brothers.

  • @jerecosawariya2172
    @jerecosawariya2172 Před rokem +224

    Hey bro...
    I have only two simple questions...
    1. From where will the new capital get the water in future coz Egypt is going through a water crisis....
    2. How will they complete this Ultra Mega project coz the financial condition of Egypt is not good on international level....
    From my POV instead of making a new city by copying Dubai, Paris and Random US city... They should have to focus on how to develop the real Ciaro....
    These are just my points...

    • @wavyy
      @wavyy Před rokem +34

      Water will become a big problem due to climate change and the Ethiopian dam. The Nile will contain less water in the future.
      However, the government will probably just prioritize water flow to this new city as government members will live there. Meanwhile, Cairo and other cities will suffer the consequences.
      I don't even want to imagine the conditions in the slums of the old cities in the upcoming decades.
      New Cairo city will become the hub for Egyptian elites such as military members and government officials. At the same time they will try to invite companies from all over the world just like Dubai did. The city will become an isolated protected fortress for the rich and powerful.

    • @MJ-og8tm
      @MJ-og8tm Před rokem +2

      should Ethiopia canceling the dam

    • @nasraabdullah6935
      @nasraabdullah6935 Před rokem +4

      1. The water problem in egypt and every middle east country tbh is complicated, 80% l of nile water that reaches egypt is used for agriculture, so supplying water to a city is no issue the issue is how to feed the growing population with scars water supply.
      2. The government sold most the land to real estate companies foreign and egyption on the promise that they build the utility ( roads , electricity, water ) , so most if not all of the residential area for high mid class and the rich only
      They are developing Giza and Cairo even relocating a whole communities who lives in what you call a slums into new neighborhoods that built from scratch .

    • @user-or1rm1ol3q
      @user-or1rm1ol3q Před rokem +1

      @@wavyy this is not new cairo dummy

    • @jacekicksass
      @jacekicksass Před rokem +22

      Now now... don't let real problems get in the way of some dictator's vanity project.

  • @Sayitlikitiz101
    @Sayitlikitiz101 Před 2 lety +4332

    I'm glad that they're building the new cities in the desert. I remember when my family and I stayed in Egypt and visited Alexandria, an Austrian architect told my dad he was sick and tired of having to call the Ministry of Antiquities every time they dug a hole for construction because they keep finding historical artifacts that needed to be cleared! 😂😂😂 We saw Ptolemaic coins they found. Very cool! Only in Egypt!

    • @Masregypt6203
      @Masregypt6203 Před 2 lety +678

      We have saying in egypt. That’s goes in Africa they dig and find gold, in Arabia they dig and find oil, in egypt we dig and find history (p.s ik Egypt is in Africa lol)

    • @riograndedosulball248
      @riograndedosulball248 Před 2 lety +123

      @@AlexanderMapping an unfortunate find in a place to build your house haha

    • @riograndedosulball248
      @riograndedosulball248 Před 2 lety +53

      I am still mustering the will to get a shovel and check a strange pile of ancient rooftiles in my fields
      99% chance I'll lose half a day digging for more broken tiles, but anyways

    • @alonsobrazzel3011
      @alonsobrazzel3011 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Masregypt6203 - EGYPT is NOT in AFRICA but in Arabia. Egypt is a Member of the ARAB REGION.

    • @zackiechan1386
      @zackiechan1386 Před 2 lety +20

      @@alonsobrazzel3011 it isn't in africa but in middle east

  • @axelschultz9550
    @axelschultz9550 Před 2 lety +2712

    Seems like they are building this new city to be very car dependent. If that is the case it might even worsen the traffic situation in old Cairo as well.

    • @sm3675
      @sm3675 Před 2 lety +311

      Yea. I've critiqued and critiqued but they don't understand. Dubai has huge highways and huge roads but faces congestion I'm occasionally too because of how car dependant the city is.

    • @organizedchaos4559
      @organizedchaos4559 Před 2 lety +241

      Yeah everything seems to be so disconnected

    • @sylviamontaez3889
      @sylviamontaez3889 Před 2 lety +84

      seems pretty counterproductive in that aspect

    • @tardvandecluntproductions1278
      @tardvandecluntproductions1278 Před 2 lety +354

      Not a single mention of trains or metro's so yeah, its going to be completely depended on road traffic.
      It's going to be a US asphalt dystopian hellhole

    • @smugfei6682
      @smugfei6682 Před 2 lety +260

      They're just doing another 1950s American style shitty car dependent development. I'm surprised they never learn.

  • @Panchiwiris
    @Panchiwiris Před rokem +140

    I see this city´s future being like one of those chinese abandoned mega-cities, or a vacation spot for the egyptian elite, like forest city in Malasya. It´s really hard to imagine
    the new capital sustaining a massive population with very clear problems (mainly water supply)

    • @alaazakaria5738
      @alaazakaria5738 Před rokem +2

      تخطيط المدينه يسع أربعين مليون مواطن هتقضي على الازدحام تماما والمياه لقد قمنا بالفعل بإنشاء محطات ضخمه للتحليه والنهر الأخضر قأئم على الصرف الزراعي من المياه المهدره وتوفير المياه للزراعه

    • @zacharyjones5102
      @zacharyjones5102 Před rokem +2

      @@alaazakaria5738 that sounds really awesome!

    • @VICE-H3RO
      @VICE-H3RO Před rokem

      Western media claim cities built by China like Kilamba are ghost towns but this is not true at all, they are full and vibrant, just watch videos from locals to see for yourself.

    • @shrifadel
      @shrifadel Před 11 měsíci +4

      you under estimate the power of corruption in Egypt.

    • @stevel5806
      @stevel5806 Před 8 měsíci +3

      abandoned mega cities? lol, you mean like Shenzhen which China turned it from a small fishing village into the most futuristic city in the world with 12+ million population in just 40 years? I guess you are one of those people who prefer to be helped by westernern countries like USA. Speaking of Americans, they could only complete some 30 km length of high speed rail in the last 20 years while the Chinese has built a HSR network of 40,000 km during that time span. you should be grateful that China is working on this project, BTW, it's 2023 and the project is on schedule and soon will be handed into the hands of Egyptian government.

  • @adhamhamed7080
    @adhamhamed7080 Před 2 lety +297

    As an Egyptian it really hurts to see that Cairo will no longer be Egypt’s capital
    Yeah i get it they made it to stop the traffic madness in Cairo but Cairo is VERY old that it’s actually older than some countries and it contains a lot of history every cm if you really want to end the “traffic madness “ then renovate the other cities in Egypt if u looked at us you will find the most of the Egyptians only live Alexandria and Cairo ( i said most ) so why not put some attention to the other cities and put people to work there instead of them traveling here to find a job

    • @ahmed-pm6zy
      @ahmed-pm6zy Před 2 lety +21

      على فكرة اسكندرية كانت عاصمة مصر لفترة طويلة جدا لحد ما اتعملت القاهرة وبقت العاصمة هو ده حال الدنيا . عموما القاهرة بما فيها تاريخ وحضارة هتتحول لمدينة سياحية من الطراز الاول لما تتنقل العاصمة والقاهرة تنفض الغبار اللي عليها هتبقا احسن واشهر بكتير من دلوقتي

    • @thehind8861
      @thehind8861 Před 2 lety +9

      Dont worry its a tradition to change capital every 500 years

    • @willemvanoranje5724
      @willemvanoranje5724 Před rokem +1

      Your right, this new city is just here for the rich evil elite and dictator

    • @nabelmokhtar153
      @nabelmokhtar153 Před rokem +8

      have you ever considered using the dot Symbol on your keyboard? Looks like this: .

    • @ankokunokayoubi
      @ankokunokayoubi Před rokem +9

      Will Cairo function like Kyoto of Japan (old heritage city, former capital) when the new one gets built and runs?

  • @hilal_younus
    @hilal_younus Před 2 lety +2061

    I hope Egypt makes sure, public transportation is a thing and doesn’t ignore it, traffic *cannot* be solved by building more streets. Even if some people thinks otherwise

    • @ahmedabozaid8262
      @ahmedabozaid8262 Před 2 lety +27

      There's fast electric train and also electric public busses

    • @korbermeister1
      @korbermeister1 Před 2 lety +7

      @Ondrej Vana this sounds about right

    • @ahmedgamal-px4nq
      @ahmedgamal-px4nq Před 2 lety +2

      lol tell that to sisi i have been saying that for a while

    • @nathan3396
      @nathan3396 Před 2 lety +26

      building more streets actually creates more traffic

    • @hilal_younus
      @hilal_younus Před 2 lety +4

      @@nathan3396 exactly

  • @IanVanTheemsche
    @IanVanTheemsche Před 2 lety +1522

    Loved seeing the storytelling on this one. Making it a 15 minute long story with only voice over and maps must have been hard. Very informative, enjoyed it alot.

  • @valeral92
    @valeral92 Před 9 měsíci +7

    So obsessed with the heavy use of pharaonic/ancient Egyptian architecture in building this new capital. Impressive and shows direct continuity in Egyptian history.

    • @lookwhostaking6700
      @lookwhostaking6700 Před 8 měsíci

      U would be amazed by all the Pharaonic structure there, everything has something pharaonic in it and the Governmental district looks like historical site itself

    • @floof6896
      @floof6896 Před 2 měsíci

      damn. hopefully everything goes well in egypt.

  • @islamashor6576
    @islamashor6576 Před 2 lety +9

    This is a great capture of the ongoing project but you missed one important topic which is transportation from the new capital to other cities and within the new capital itself. You should check it out, it's worth another episode. Keep up the good work bro 👌👏

  • @RUmlas
    @RUmlas Před 2 lety +818

    Love seeing these mega/legacy projects. Years later you see how these projects, initiatives have come together and whether they stayed true to original plans or not and whether they were sort on budget/encountered financial turmoil. Loved this video.

    • @retf8977
      @retf8977 Před 2 lety +52

      It will turn to a ghost city.

    • @felixgluck2874
      @felixgluck2874 Před 2 lety +56

      It feels like it will be a city without any soul. Planned out cities like this probably sound nice on paper and look impressive in the first moment but don't at all fit to egypt or its population. I am doubtful that this will be nice.

    • @user-or1rm1ol3q
      @user-or1rm1ol3q Před 2 lety +13

      @@retf8977 it is already filled with people you wanna see?

    • @user-or1rm1ol3q
      @user-or1rm1ol3q Před 2 lety +6

      @@felixgluck2874 it is already filled with people by the way

    • @AbdelazizRashed--
      @AbdelazizRashed-- Před 2 lety +17

      Don't worry this city will be filled with people like any other project especially since new laws are preventing the expansion of the new residential building in cities to make sure that these new cities have residents. For the funding and whether or not the project will be completed. I assure you it will be completed regardless of any problem it may face (other than the fall of the current regime) because it is controlled by the military and we are bleeded dry so that the government gets the money it needs to complete these projects.

  • @yassern
    @yassern Před 2 lety +1801

    After reading a lot comments talking about public transportation, I can tell you as an architect involved with the construction of several parts of the new capital, I've come in contact with a lot of ambitious public transportation projects being built already. To name a few; Transportation Hub, Mono Rail, LRT, Electric Bus network, and the High Speed train. I'm not an expert on this manner, but I can tell you that the planners did put a lot of work in solving these problems before they occur.
    The Mono rail for example will link horizontally from East (Red Sea city called Ein Sokna) to West of Cairo (Industrial district of 6th October city) thus reducing a trip that usually takes more than two hours to less than an hour.
    The LRT will link diagonally the different urban cities around Cairo.
    I believe that the creator can make a whole video talking about the new transportation infrastructure being built.

    • @samyebeid4534
      @samyebeid4534 Před 2 lety +28

      @فرحن جما تركت كل اللي قاله و ركزت على اسمه🤦🏻‍♂️

    • @davo7512
      @davo7512 Před 2 lety +19

      @فرحن جما that’s not the n word though

    • @jesusislord6545
      @jesusislord6545 Před 2 lety +3

      Repent to Jesus Christ!
      “I will instruct you and teach you in the way you should go; I will counsel you with my loving eye on you.”
      ‭‭Psalms‬ ‭32:8‬ ‭NIV‬‬
      O

    • @tigress63
      @tigress63 Před 2 lety +28

      Most of these modes of transportation will be antiquated within the next 20 years. We will see the autonomous vehicles taking over. The infrastructure for LRT is massively expensive and some of the best LRT corporations in the world can't make brand new systems work with older systems. Monorail is still a very expensive venture however due to the speeds, it is viable for the cost as you can move many people very quickly and the technology is still getting better by the decades.
      I am amazed at how much money they are throwing into this to make everything the biggest or the tallest or the best etc. This doesn't guarantee success but likely will guarantee the burden on the Egyptian people. Some of the best universities are in cities and towns that are mediocre where the taxation is affordable and the livability index is high.

    • @JPmaxlevel
      @JPmaxlevel Před 2 lety +2

      like any city lool

  • @MolehFlexx
    @MolehFlexx Před rokem

    a very much clear & more explaining video of this whole project i’ve ever came across! good video 🔥

  • @northie1957
    @northie1957 Před 2 lety +1

    Fabulous job. it's an awesome video ,I loved every minute of it way to go Egypt .you may live in peace and prosperity.

  • @elliotttheneko
    @elliotttheneko Před 2 lety +630

    Two of my concerns:
    1) Water? How will it get it?
    2) Public Transport? Considering the amount of congestion that initiated this thing in the whole place, what public transport systems will be implemented?
    edit:
    I've read all of your comments.
    From what I've gathered:
    - Water should not be as big of an issue human consumption wise, as supposedly it is only an issue in the Agriculture sector.
    - As for Public Transport, I can see that there are plans to expand the metro and bus systems (very cool), a High-speed railway to link the major cities (also very cool), and build an LRT and monorail system in New Cairo. Implementing monorail would be rather challenging as not many transport systems use it, so sticking to just LRT would probably be a safer choice, but better than nothing I suppose.
    - There are arguments on the grounds that Egypt's military is sucking Egyptian coffers dry. Due to my political beliefs, I do agree to some extent with this statement, but ultimately it is the choice of the Egyptian and only the Egyptian people to decide what they want in a Government, and if they demand a strong military, then so be it.
    TL;DR Egypt is making good strides towards their vision of the Cairo Metro (and surrounding cities), but things can most certainly be made even better.

    • @AmSeris
      @AmSeris Před 2 lety +79

      Water was never a problem and never will be a problem for Egyptians. It is a problem for crops, for agriculture. Egyptians have plenty of drinking water and compared to Gulf countries Egyptians seldom drink mineral water and all drink tap water and filter tap water. Water bill is extremely cheap in Egypt and water outage is rare. Drinking water is abundant in Egypt. Problem comes when it has to do with agriculture. In that vein, Egypt needs a lot more water than it has now to feed all its agricultural lands. This means Egypt either has to modernize and make their farms more efficient or increase water share from elsewhere. But in the context of an urban city with 0 crops, who cares?
      Public transport plans are already in development whether the monorail or the LRT, but either way Egyptians are not strangers to long distances in Cairo. This city is not the first neighbourhood to be built miles away from central Cairo, this trend has been going on for decades. Cities like Madinity, Shorouk, New Cairo, October, Sheikh Zayed, are all plenty of distance away from central Cairo, and are self-sufficient and travel is by car. Since this is an important capital though, Egypt plans to introduce actual transport systems like LRT and Monorail, which will not only help get to the capital but help all those suburbs I mentioned earlier to be better reached. This trend is probably even older than you think as cities like Nasr city are the older generation of these outskirt plans but now it is fully integrated into Cairo.

    • @ChaplainDMK
      @ChaplainDMK Před 2 lety +37

      Lol do you think any of the government officials that thought this stuff up actually care about public transport? They just get chauffered around in their Limos and have police make space in traffic jams. The plebians can be stuck in traffic jams who cares lol got my Octagon (get it, it's more than PENTAgon)

    • @MohamedYasser-xq8ks
      @MohamedYasser-xq8ks Před 2 lety +24

      ​@@ChaplainDMK yes government officials in Egypt care about public transport they already built a Monorail line & an LRT Train to transport people to & from The New Administrative Capital , additionally a new train is being built right now and will be fully finished in 2024/2025

    • @ChaplainDMK
      @ChaplainDMK Před 2 lety +42

      @@MohamedYasser-xq8ks Dude, that's not public transport. Public transport is a system that needs to connect people to different suburbs, their work, places of recreation and leisure, commerical districts etc.. A monorail to and from the administrative capital is nothing. You need rapid transirt - suburban railroads, metro, and tram networks that connect New Cairo to all other districts and central Cairo.
      The Cairo public transport system is a joke for 20 million people. It's comparable to Prague, a city 5% the size of Cairo proper. Forget about places like Istanbul, Paris, London, Berlin etc. that have dozens of lines and hundreds of kilometers of metro and suburban rail, tram and bus services connecting every part of the city with intervals of 3-10 minutes 24/7.
      Instead of the government investing in creating this and also solving the traffic issues in central Cairo, they decide to run away to a vanity project out in the desert with enormous government buildings, palaces, and parks for the ultra wealth and powerful, while leaving the poor and working class to deal with the traffic and pollution of "Old" Cairo.

    • @MohamedYasser-xq8ks
      @MohamedYasser-xq8ks Před 2 lety +11

      ​@@ChaplainDMK The Monorail will have 6 stations inside the city to transport people to and from places INSIDE the new Administrative Capital , The LRT Train will have 3 or 4 stations working inside the city, sure they could do more but you're acting as if they can't build a metro line or do further expansions in the future for public transportation, they're already building a huge bus stations that will deliver people from and to the New Capital and of course serve people needs within the city itself

  • @caiawlodarski5339
    @caiawlodarski5339 Před 2 lety +237

    I love these sorts of modern takes of ancient architecture, the buildings look pharaonic and modern at the same time, it is amazing.

    • @wrux
      @wrux Před 2 lety +2

      It looks Arabic

    • @Rahim-444
      @Rahim-444 Před 2 lety +12

      @@wrux and like ancient Egypt at the same time so it's a mixture of what the Egyptians are know for !

    • @darthsaber8809
      @darthsaber8809 Před 2 lety +17

      @@wrux no it’s not
      Most buildings designs are based on pharaonic Egyptian symbols some of them is already built and finished

    • @newagain9964
      @newagain9964 Před 2 lety

      It’s a failure.

    • @Rahim-444
      @Rahim-444 Před 2 lety +6

      @@newagain9964 no elaboration or anything just talking shite for the sake of it

  • @Silent.Program
    @Silent.Program Před 2 lety +120

    This city is extremely centralized. While centralization is great to achieve top-performance and synergies in a very small area, it largely excludes the rest of the city from participating. The plan also pretty much dictates housing districts per income or occupation. This brings the danger of supporting inequality of income, opportunities and district development over the coming decades. The most "important" or promising districts will receive the most attention in city development while other districts will not receive the necessary funding and decline. The horrific dependency on traffic to reach centralized hot-spots will increase this disparity even further and is discussed as its own problem in other comments already.
    I wish them the best of luck with their new cities, they are going to need it!

    • @glennlrw
      @glennlrw Před 2 lety +8

      The more compact government administration is the only thing they solved it would appear. The central park is nice, but will there be smaller neighborhood parks? I agree with many here who shake their head at the widely separated work, live, and play functions. If they could walk to some of these, it would be better. Public transportation yes, but not as a substitute for building things together rather than apart. This reminds me of zoning, where you cannot possibly live over a store because it must be in a zone all by itself. I see a reference to Washington, DC with the central axis of buildings.

    • @prenomnom2253
      @prenomnom2253 Před 2 lety

      Yeah I kept thinking this city was clearly built by a dictatorship. Centralized government buildings outside the core of the city screams that they don’t care about people’s voices. The elites will just stay together

    • @georgerizk1631
      @georgerizk1631 Před 2 lety +3

      The project is grandiose, and standards of living is well below poverty in the USA. Egypt needed to develop its own population, which can bring tourists to see the best monuments on earth. Clean streets, clean people would be my first priority if I was running Egypt.

    • @southcolumbia402
      @southcolumbia402 Před rokem +1

      Its all seperated mess make you need to have a car

    • @glennlrw
      @glennlrw Před rokem +4

      @@southcolumbia402 The planners of this would probably shrug and wonder why people would balk at driving for groceries to park on a massive parking lot, drive to a massive one level shopping mall surrounded by miles of parking lots, drive to a massive central park to park on a massive parking lot to enjoy the park, drive miles to a massive government complex to park on a massive parking lot, and so on. Nothing wrong with spending half of a day in a car on massive ten lane freeways stopped in traffic.

  • @cuboestudio
    @cuboestudio Před rokem +1

    Great video, beautiful and immersive graphics

  • @doug_barnard
    @doug_barnard Před 2 lety +556

    I was literally wondering when this video would come out just a few hours ago and then boom, here it is! Loved it, turned out great!!!

  • @louisjones2653
    @louisjones2653 Před 2 lety +273

    I was in Egypt in October and let me tell ya, they are building at a pace i never thought possible. New vs Old Cairo are going to be night and day.

    • @acutee2
      @acutee2 Před 2 lety +19

      This video is deeply false and is an ad by the Egyptian government. This is very clear as the map includes disputed territory only the government includes in its maps. These universities are not being built in the new capital according the schools, their is no 2 child law, the Mogamma closed years ago and is not a traffic issue. This video should be removed or at least marked as a advertisement. Neo should be ashamed for supporting a dictator and dishonoring the Egyptian people.

    • @GeorgeAnton.
      @GeorgeAnton. Před 2 lety +24

      @@acutee2 bruh chill out first
      2nd he took all of those pictures from the internet and it was posted only by Egyptian government so you won't find any other website post about it
      3rd it isn't sponsored by the Egyptian government and if egypt would like to share such a thing they would just share it without taking to a content creator like neo
      4th the new administration capital has been in progress for a couple of year so if they wanted to share something they would have shared it years ago so your comment is just sitting on the content creator and the country

    • @M.Salemx
      @M.Salemx Před 2 lety +4

      @@acutee2
      Stop! dummy

    • @immortaltwilight3449
      @immortaltwilight3449 Před 2 lety +8

      @@acutee2 🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑🐑
      Enough illustrated

    • @user-ep1sw6od3u
      @user-ep1sw6od3u Před 2 lety +14

      @@acutee2 calling well established youtubers paid actors when they don't fit you narrative won't convince westerners, even egyptians won't fall for that .

  • @5alitavakoli
    @5alitavakoli Před 10 měsíci

    That was truly awesome. Thanks for the video

  • @svono_svono_music
    @svono_svono_music Před rokem +1

    So cool. This city looks amazing, I look forward to visiting it - and the pyramids / red sea - when it is completed.

  • @zeke2408
    @zeke2408 Před 2 lety +496

    If planned cities are extremely reliant on cars, they are already half a failure. With a strong emphasis on public transport, you can plan a city compactly and efficiently. This is far too extensive, and a waste of a large amount of resources. You separate districts from one another through the multi-lane roads and reduce the life quality of the inhabitant unnecessarily.

    • @KemetEG
      @KemetEG Před 2 lety +36

      the video ignored the transportation not the Egyptian government because there's 100 km light electric railway will connect the cairo subway lines to new capital from the north of the capital to its heart to the Olympic complex and will open in three months from now and there's 60 km monorail line begin from Cairo subway lines passing through new cairo and will be parallel to the green River and will connect with the electric train inthe heart of the capital and that will open next year and there's third transport project under construction which is high speed railway network consent of three lines first line under construction will connect the red sea to the Mediterranean sea passing through the new capital intersect with the light electric train in the Olympic complex and will pass through cairo giza alexandria and marsa matroh in the Mediterranean 660 km and there's another two high speed railway lines under negotiation one of them will be parallel to the nile

    • @hageneesje
      @hageneesje Před 2 lety +31

      @@KemetEG I just Read your comment. And literally all the things you mentioned are things coming. Basic public transportation should already be the already there in cities where regular egyptians live. And if you want to ask. I have been to Cairo and public transport is very poor for An MEGACITY.

    • @zeke2408
      @zeke2408 Před 2 lety +8

      @@skrettsnerk508 You are wrong, an excessive 'Adam Something' enjoyer! But cars have annoyed me since I lived for the first time in a city 5 years ago. And we keep growing. Hopefully to a serious interest group soon.

    • @KemetEG
      @KemetEG Před 2 lety +5

      @@hageneesje yes but this projects under construction not plans .. yes cairo has bad public transportation Only three subway lines to city host twenty millions but the government is building another two subway lines and third one under planning but you know subway projects need times compared with trains on the surface or even monorail and there's no space in Cairo so subway lines are the only solution but it need times

    • @hageneesje
      @hageneesje Před 2 lety

      @@KemetEG I really hope that the projects Will succeed. Like not only for the new glamorous cities but also for the cities that already there. And that should come 1st

  • @runcoltrun
    @runcoltrun Před 2 lety +162

    "Traffic is bad, boss"
    "You're right, let's build more cloverleaf interchanges."
    *facepalm*

    • @davescott7680
      @davescott7680 Před 2 lety +9

      Ah, the boss is a fellow Cities Skylines player I see.

    • @acutee2
      @acutee2 Před 2 lety +9

      This video is deeply false and is an ad by the Egyptian government. This is very clear as the map includes disputed territory only the government includes in its maps. These universities are not being built in the new capital according the schools, their is no 2 child law, the Mogamma closed years ago and is not a traffic issue. This video should be removed or at least marked as a advertisement. Neo should be ashamed for supporting a dictator and dishonoring the Egyptian people.

    • @runcoltrun
      @runcoltrun Před 2 lety +21

      @@acutee2 perhaps you should move your comment to the main thread as it has nothing to do with our city skylines reference

    • @nicolainielsen7700
      @nicolainielsen7700 Před 2 lety +3

      @@runcoltrun He is literally just shitposting that same comment on all threads.

    • @runcoltrun
      @runcoltrun Před 2 lety +2

      @@nicolainielsen7700 well... It is the internet after all

  • @leonardboberg8794
    @leonardboberg8794 Před 2 lety +2

    such a good video. I am so invested in this and I cant wait to see the end result!!!
    W video
    W Egypt

  • @justcallmed5297
    @justcallmed5297 Před 2 lety

    Love watching your vids and when these cities are complete they'll look amazing
    New Subscriber 👍🏽

  • @azvdcrafts6147
    @azvdcrafts6147 Před 2 lety +421

    This reminds me what happened here in Brazil during the 1950s With president Kubitschek. The dude decided to relocate the nation's capital (it was Rio at the time) to a more strategic location. Problem was that instead of picking a city like São Paulo or Belo Horizonte, the dude decide to create a new city from scratch (Brasília, our current capital) the amount of money that was lost at this project was so great that in the end the creation of Brasília brought more dispair than actual prosperity 😬

    • @KhalerJex
      @KhalerJex Před 2 lety +72

      Actually the idea of making the capital at the central plateau wasn't his. It was already a century old at the time. And I dispute the Idea that Brasilia wasn't profitable: it is the 3rd largest city in Brazil today and it is at the very center of the area with the fastest growing sector in the country's economy: Tropical Agriculture.

    • @alexpecktacular
      @alexpecktacular Před 2 lety +45

      What’s crazy is how the entire city was built in 41 months, quite a milestone for its time.

    • @zarits11mode23
      @zarits11mode23 Před 2 lety +3

      @@alexpecktacular how much money did they spent

    • @alexpecktacular
      @alexpecktacular Před 2 lety +12

      @@zarits11mode23 pretty sure like $1.4B

    • @vaiyt
      @vaiyt Před 2 lety +18

      imagine how much taxpayer money would be spent hauling politicians by helicopter if they moved the capital to são paulo...

  • @user-dr3no5hi1i
    @user-dr3no5hi1i Před 2 lety +6

    نرجو لمصر الشقيقة كل الخير و النمو و عسى ان يكون حالكم افضل مع مرور الزمن فأنتم تستحقون كل خير سادتي
    تحية لإخواننا المصريين الأعزاء من العراق

  • @MateyMusic
    @MateyMusic Před rokem +20

    Wow, this is a great idea and surely won’t be a huge disaster! I am so excited about this!!1!!11!

    • @TheWoollyFrog
      @TheWoollyFrog Před rokem +1

      Literally every dictator has done this with varying levels of success.

    • @freezingicy9457
      @freezingicy9457 Před rokem +1

      @@TheWoollyFrog it might be a success for the dictator but will it be a success for the economy?

    • @TheWoollyFrog
      @TheWoollyFrog Před rokem +4

      @@freezingicy9457 If running an urban park six times larger than Central Park in the desert is an indication of how much thought they put in the entire project, then most likely it won't. This is why cities should be planned and built by people with degrees in the filed and not man-children with money and power.

  • @kerus567
    @kerus567 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for making this video.

  • @JTuggy_MissionFrmGlobalMargins

    All the most interesting questions are not asked, much less answered: where will power and water come from? What kind of urban transport is the city being built for? What logistical hurdles does building and living in the desert present, and how will they be dealt with? What do futurists and urban planners think about this? Where else in.the world have other such cities and government mega-projects succeeded, and where have they failed? What lessons have been learned? What does this project say, good and bad, about Egypt as a society?

    • @justwobert9850
      @justwobert9850 Před 2 lety +51

      power is easy to solve given its a desert, wind and solar power are fairly easy to get. water is the harder part and will be a very interesting problem to solve

    • @josephgraham5706
      @josephgraham5706 Před 2 lety +63

      This has "bad idea" written all over it, but I'm not in charge of a country. I'm just a man, calling a spade a spade.

    • @MRawash
      @MRawash Před 2 lety +60

      Egypt has a 30MW surplus of power that it exports, 20% from renewables, the rest from natural gas. Transport is electric bus, LTR, monorail, and highspeed electric rail. Egypt doesn't have a choice but to build in the desert, whatever hurdles there are they are nothing to compared to what awaits if they don't move out of the Nile valley, fast.

    • @ofroaddude5859
      @ofroaddude5859 Před 2 lety +4

      @@MRawash
      How does it have a surplus form natural gas when it purchase natural gas from near by countries?

    • @MRawash
      @MRawash Před 2 lety +31

      @@ofroaddude5859 Surplus of electricity production*. It's also a net exporter of natural gas, but that's a separate thing. The natural gas it imports (e.g. from Israel and Cyprus) is for liquidation and reexport, not local consumption.

  • @cliffwoodbury5319
    @cliffwoodbury5319 Před 2 lety +407

    As large as these new cities are, it should eleviate space so they can rebuilt large sections of Old Cairo to be more transit and buissness friendly while retaining some of the vital old neigboorhoods and individual buildings for tourist and cultural sake. Connecting all the cities by mass transit and make Cairo a world class city would be a must for that. it would be a shame if they tried to seperate the city to keep the common man out of these modern portions! I wished you displayed these aspects of the new city!

    • @ahmedawad4508
      @ahmedawad4508 Před 2 lety +9

      we allready do this research bro

    • @omarhashim2972
      @omarhashim2972 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah im pretty sure we are trying that already

    • @aniksamiurrahman6365
      @aniksamiurrahman6365 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ahmedawad4508 Well, the video didn't cover any of these did they?

    • @khulhucthulhu9952
      @khulhucthulhu9952 Před 2 lety +6

      They're building this new city very traffic unfriendly, so I doubt that they're gonna play those cards well

    • @cuzimmoody6470
      @cuzimmoody6470 Před 2 lety +8

      ​@@aniksamiurrahman6365 the video is specifically covering only the new administrative capital not cairo

  • @drsherb1552
    @drsherb1552 Před 2 lety

    Wow. You did wonderful in this video

  • @user-us4vf5hb7v
    @user-us4vf5hb7v Před 6 měsíci

    Great exposure 👍Good job👍🙏

  • @ritualising
    @ritualising Před 2 lety +36

    It’s because Cairo got destroyed in the transformers movie if you remember, so they gotta build a whole new city

  • @DowntownPaco
    @DowntownPaco Před 2 lety +99

    I’ve been reading about the new administrative capital of Egypt for some time now. Your video is excellent, one of the best I’ve seen yet and it gives me an even greater reason to visit Egypt in the next decade. Thank you!

    • @ma.s2386
      @ma.s2386 Před 2 lety +2

      Greetings from egypt. 2026 would be when everything comes together regarding mega projects in egypt. It would be a great time to see how the old meets the new.

    • @JamesJJSMilton
      @JamesJJSMilton Před 2 lety

      That's if Egypt lasts. country doesn't seem long for this world.

    • @ma.s2386
      @ma.s2386 Před 2 lety +3

      @@JamesJJSMilton
      Lol, it lasted for 5300 years through wars, occupations, famines, natural disasters, civil wars. It will last till the day the world ends. Cause Egypt is not based on, ethnicity, race, religion, tibe, dynasty, language, abundance of resources. It's based on a resilient idea and ideas don't die.

  • @danieltorok4403
    @danieltorok4403 Před 2 lety +2

    Amazing. Would love to see it when its completed. Good job Egypt, from Hungary.

  • @kunsanseoul
    @kunsanseoul Před 2 lety

    Very informative. Thank you.

  • @Teelan.5268
    @Teelan.5268 Před 2 lety +84

    I live in Australia and I can't help but find the construction of Egypt's new capital completely exciting! I am a bit of an Architect myself and I have fallen in love with the new design for Egypt. I cant wait to see the city in its full completion!

    • @motazmahmoudegy2148
      @motazmahmoudegy2148 Před 2 lety +8

      Ok sir . President Sisi has already ordered the gouvernment to move to the new capital . And inaurgation will be next year may be the 1st quarter
      The 1st phase is almost finished ,2nd one in 2025 and 3rd and final one in 2030

    • @ahriskof1
      @ahriskof1 Před 2 lety +3

      If you are visiting Egypt soon I can give you a tour there

    • @acutee2
      @acutee2 Před 2 lety

      This video is deeply false and is an ad by the Egyptian government. This is very clear as the map includes disputed territory only the government includes in its maps. These universities are not being built in the new capital according the schools, their is no 2 child law, the Mogamma closed years ago and is not a traffic issue. This video should be removed or at least marked as a advertisement. Neo should be ashamed for supporting a dictator and dishonoring the Egyptian people.

    • @cwg73160
      @cwg73160 Před 2 lety +4

      @@acutee2 Show proof that the Egyptian government paid this channel. If not, shut up and sit down.

  • @martinbrown2268
    @martinbrown2268 Před 2 lety +740

    It’s exciting to learn that Egypt is going big building for the future. With its unmatched history of architecture and distinct aesthetic I’m filled with anticipation of a new wonder all of humanity can take pride in.

    • @omartaher3600
      @omartaher3600 Před 2 lety +45

      It is built upon oppression, wanna take pride in that ?

    • @martinbrown2268
      @martinbrown2268 Před 2 lety +49

      @@omartaher3600 Yes humans are flawed. If you or I held real power we would be corrupted also. Suck it up.

    • @M.Salemx
      @M.Salemx Před 2 lety +18

      @@omartaher3600
      Shut up !

    • @humptydumpy8029
      @humptydumpy8029 Před 2 lety +30

      @@martinbrown2268 can’t wait for this to sit as a half finished failure in the middle of a dessert just like what the saudis did.
      When will the Dumbass governments realize they can’t just will these grand cities into existence they are far to ambitious and the demand for the expensive housing and excessive sports venues will never be there.
      Not to mention moulding a city out of little districts connected with highways lacks so much foresight it’s almost unbelievable considering they problem they are trying to escape is congestion.

    • @user-ep1sw6od3u
      @user-ep1sw6od3u Před 2 lety +11

      @@omartaher3600 found the islamist.

  • @7koma754
    @7koma754 Před 2 lety

    Good video , Thank you from Cairo

  • @jonahadi9092
    @jonahadi9092 Před 5 měsíci +3

    I love hearing about these projects. It’s great to hear news like this instead of the constant mentions of war, waste and oil. Those subjects are ever-present in the history of man and it’s much healthier to focus on constructive and creative matters.

  • @JacoJohan46664
    @JacoJohan46664 Před 2 lety +1244

    I appreciate the efforts to reference their history and Egyptian identity in their architecture and city planning. That is an apportunity that was squandered by cities like Dubai.

    • @saptaccrvima3563
      @saptaccrvima3563 Před 2 lety +267

      Dubai really doesn't have history, prior to discovery of oil, it was a fishing village for nomads

    • @JacoJohan46664
      @JacoJohan46664 Před 2 lety +84

      @@saptaccrvima3563 Fair point, but Dubai represents a region, and I'm sure I can think of a few designs that would distinctly reference Arabian heritage.

    • @Oseiwe
      @Oseiwe Před 2 lety +83

      @@saptaccrvima3563 I wanted to comment in same vein. It is Egypt we're talking about here -- not some nondescript land; unless one doesn't know what Egypt means in history

    • @kmli2849
      @kmli2849 Před 2 lety +1

      And....Dubai and KSA will help fund this....fyi

    • @ThePunisher014
      @ThePunisher014 Před 2 lety +5

      @@RockBrentwood If these projects don't come to life and the economic and social situation worsens especially with the water crisis, people will revolt AGAIN, now that's something "Dubai and KSA" don't want! so sure.. they will fund this alright

  • @32408053
    @32408053 Před 2 lety +205

    I really hope that this new capital is more of a city than a massive monument like Brazil's Brasília. A massive hell of oversized building and seas of concrete/asphalt doesn't stimulate innovation and economic prosperity, and it will probably just propagate the transit problem.

    • @leeo268
      @leeo268 Před 2 lety +7

      It is a political city. For government.

    • @32408053
      @32408053 Před 2 lety +20

      @@leeo268 but, at least as it's shown in the video, the city is also inteded to be a economical/scientific center. And for that it needs to have the characteristics that bring people together.

    • @johnhalat
      @johnhalat Před 2 lety +10

      As a Brazilian, I
      totally agree. Based on the images, its not exactly a new city. Its part of the great Cairo and this will help with density.

    • @jgr7487
      @jgr7487 Před 2 lety +5

      my guess is that they are relying on the failed project of New Cairo & the surrounding cities to make it really work out fine. you have to cross New Cairo to go to the NCC from Cairo.

    • @PrideDefiler
      @PrideDefiler Před 2 lety +4

      Don't worry, I can already smell a financial crisis for Egypt LOL.
      They are not capable of this project - This is a classic build like hell before a huge bust scenarios we have seen so many times before :p

  • @tommay2437
    @tommay2437 Před rokem

    Great. Very good investigation, very good presentation. 👍

  • @ChristophervanderWalt

    Such an insane video! Thanks

  • @ethos4066
    @ethos4066 Před 2 lety +285

    Very informative. As someone living in Egypt with little knowledge of the city, absolutely loved the video. My only concern is of how it's planning to tackle the water shortage and when is it expected to actually hit the country. Thanks for the video!

    • @yousam3821
      @yousam3821 Před 2 lety +17

      The government constructs the city and all other cities in the desert to shift population growth from the Nile valley to the desert. So, it will decrease the illegal building on fertile lands and inhibit population growth in old cities to maintain fertile lands for agriculture.

    • @ma.s2386
      @ma.s2386 Před 2 lety +14

      By tapping into underground water and using sra water distillation. There is no other choice. Egyptians will reach 150 million by 2030. The nile's water won't increase by 50%

    • @SSGuvola
      @SSGuvola Před 2 lety

      You will certainly not live in this city

    • @omarhashim2972
      @omarhashim2972 Před 2 lety +3

      Ey nice, someone else from Egypt

    • @beringstraitrailway
      @beringstraitrailway Před 2 lety +1

      @@SSGuvola
      Why not?

  • @lordkent8143
    @lordkent8143 Před 2 lety +336

    Love how they're combining their heritage and history with the modernity of a metropolitan city and capital. Aspiring. Just hope it won't be an empty city like some cities built from scratch.

    • @acutee2
      @acutee2 Před 2 lety +7

      This video is deeply false and is an ad by the Egyptian government. This is very clear as the map includes disputed territory only the government includes in its maps. These universities are not being built in the new capital according the schools, their is no 2 child law, the Mogamma closed years ago and is not a traffic issue. This video should be removed or at least marked as a advertisement. Neo should be ashamed for supporting a dictator and dishonoring the Egyptian people.

    • @ma.s2386
      @ma.s2386 Před 2 lety +33

      Well 6 new cities have been built in cairo from scratch in the past 40 years and no they are thriving, i live and work in one, much better than central cairo.
      new cap is bigger than all of them combined.
      Note: don't mind the trolls who spam each comment with copy pasted replies.

    • @acutee2
      @acutee2 Před 2 lety +3

      @@ma.s2386 Those cities are great and are for the people and have nothing to do with this new capitol. This move for the regime buildings is simply a way for the dictator to avoid protestors knocking at his door circa 2011/13. Sometimes trolls stand for more than sycophants like Neo who are obviously being paid to spread lies and bolster Sisi's shit that is hurting Egypt, its people and its neighboring countries. RESIST.

    • @ma.s2386
      @ma.s2386 Před 2 lety +31

      @@acutee2
      Again you're cluless, i work there, it's nothing like you say.
      You actively advocating against building, what is that ? Resist what ? Building a better future ?

    • @kohZeei
      @kohZeei Před 2 lety +5

      todays egyptians heritage is basically just arabs who took over the country 700bc, some few might be related to the ancients of egypt but very slightly.

  • @gopat9425
    @gopat9425 Před 2 lety

    I just so u intro and i understood what you was about. I am definitly buying your channel!!!! I am talking about subscribing lol

  • @Virsho
    @Virsho Před rokem +12

    people seriosly thing this is a good idea

  • @sriharshacv7760
    @sriharshacv7760 Před 2 lety +28

    For so long Egypt had been waiting for their time to shine. This is it. Love from India!

    • @varoonnone7159
      @varoonnone7159 Před 2 lety +1

      Except that it's not Ancient Egyptian rising again but a more islamic Egypt. How can we Indians be glad?

    • @oe9953
      @oe9953 Před 2 lety +6

      @@varoonnone7159 Well if only hindus mind their own business

    • @solimanel-deeb8922
      @solimanel-deeb8922 Před 2 lety

      @@varoonnone7159 You can cry...

    • @erikdejong9728
      @erikdejong9728 Před 2 lety

      @@varoonnone7159 They will not shine as an Islamic country

    • @oe9953
      @oe9953 Před 2 lety

      @@glitchmatrix8699 Ok hindu bingo 3rd world guy.

  • @nigelbhebhe2805
    @nigelbhebhe2805 Před 2 lety +903

    I really like that the Oblisco is pretty much a modernized version of the historical monument. So cool!

    • @user-or1rm1ol3q
      @user-or1rm1ol3q Před 2 lety +8

      The presidential palace is better

    • @iminumst7827
      @iminumst7827 Před 2 lety +25

      Both are very cool looking buildings I hope to see them realized and viewed for real.

    • @adler11211
      @adler11211 Před 2 lety

      thats what they say at 11:58

    • @g0lgrim1
      @g0lgrim1 Před 2 lety +14

      Best building to be owned by a egyptian Mega-Corp which acts as godly overlords over all the small poor people. XD

    • @user-or1rm1ol3q
      @user-or1rm1ol3q Před 2 lety +3

      @@g0lgrim1 the people in Egyptian prisons live better than the citizens of your country

  • @Amer_711
    @Amer_711 Před 2 lety +5

    تحيا مصر من السعودية ♥

    • @yosefhani8761
      @yosefhani8761 Před 2 lety

      تحيا ارض الحرمين الشريفين من ام الدنيا ❤️💜❤️

  • @johnhattanfine
    @johnhattanfine Před rokem +1

    Amazing vidéo man

  • @samd3497
    @samd3497 Před 2 lety +310

    That looks like a nightmare for anyone outside of a car. Everything is spread so far apart and all the renderings seem to show 10-20 lane wide roads. Simply unbelievable that someone would think that's a good idea in 2021.

    • @TheKeksadler
      @TheKeksadler Před 2 lety +33

      It is an international city after all, adopting American urban design is but the cherry on top ;)

    • @putraduha3176
      @putraduha3176 Před 2 lety +43

      Yeah bad news pal, that's the truth for every city in desert, who would walk on even a kilos on 40°C

    • @gruzit2622
      @gruzit2622 Před 2 lety +41

      @@putraduha3176 so how does middle eastern lives before cars?

    • @Cowpiepizza4
      @Cowpiepizza4 Před 2 lety +14

      this isnt europe bro its too hot to expect the upper class to actually walk anywhere outdoors, although it would have been interesting to have an underground metro system for the public, and another underground system for the government, to facilitate below ground car-less traffic (this wasnt included in the video, but it was part of the planing for the city, not sure if its still as ambitious as it was intiially)

    • @_tsu_
      @_tsu_ Před 2 lety +30

      @@gruzit2622 make densely packed cities, like old cairo

  • @bluegold1026
    @bluegold1026 Před 2 lety +147

    I wouldn’t be surprised if Cairo bids for the Summer Olympics sometime in the future. Most infrastructure is already there thanks to these new cities and especially in the new capital. Those two sports complexes are looking very promising.

    • @acutee2
      @acutee2 Před 2 lety +4

      This video is deeply false and is an ad by the Egyptian government. This is very clear as the map includes disputed territory only the government includes in its maps. These universities are not being built in the new capital according the schools, their is no 2 child law, the Mogamma closed years ago and is not a traffic issue. This video should be removed or at least marked as a advertisement. Neo should be ashamed for supporting a dictator and dishonoring the Egyptian people.

    • @eyadahmed6578
      @eyadahmed6578 Před 2 lety +27

      @@acutee2 lol you are copy pasting the same comment on every thread. For the 2 child law, he did mention that it was an initiative not a law. Am not sure from where are you but traffic is definitely a major problem in Cairo and Giza. "These new universities are not being built", lol my sister is already in one of these universities, you can check their websites. What a liar. For halaib triangle, it is an Egyptian territory. Deal with it.

    • @pavlyayman7779
      @pavlyayman7779 Před 2 lety +11

      @@acutee2 I dont know where you do get your info from and i dont know what your intentions are, but you are doing nothing but bullshitting. The universities are up and running already and i've been working on the monorail project myself so i know a thing or two about the country's direction on doing an outstanding transportation system.

    • @ansv3340
      @ansv3340 Před 2 lety

      I think you meant Olimpia Greece ) they have all the original infrastructures )

    • @jesusislord6545
      @jesusislord6545 Před 2 lety +2

      Repent to Jesus Christ!
      “I will instruct you and teach you in the way you should go; I will counsel you with my loving eye on you.”
      ‭‭Psalms‬ ‭32:8‬ ‭NIV‬‬

  • @goldendragon4891
    @goldendragon4891 Před 2 lety +12

    Hey there Neo, your video is amazingly well done and it is clear you put an immense amount of effort into it. As an Egyptian myself whose school is in the heart of new capital I can tell you the progress is astonishing. In such little time they have done so much. For example, the iconic tower now is so high that I can see it from my home in El Sherouk city! And the city's gates are now complete. I'm excited for this new Egypt.

    • @bam1860
      @bam1860 Před rokem +7

      How is that big tower helping the poverty and corruption in your country?

    • @willemvanoranje5724
      @willemvanoranje5724 Před rokem +2

      It's a new egypt build on the interest of a few leaving behind the poor and impoverished to rot in Cairo. You know nothing please watch the video I gave you.

    • @goldendragon4891
      @goldendragon4891 Před rokem +2

      @@bam1860 Well, your comment expresses lack of basic understanding of how Egypt's economy works,
      A large portion comes from tourism and the new capital completes the ancient rich history with the modern capability of today. Simply, look at the Emirates. A country whose people lived in tents just a few years ago now stands as a global destination for tourism changing their whole economy to the best. They played their cards right and Egypt is on that path. You ask how will that tower help the economy, just look at Khalifa tower for example, that brings MILLIONS every year alone for the Emirates.
      Think before you comment.

    • @bolbyballinger
      @bolbyballinger Před rokem

      @@goldendragon4891 The way a tourism economy works, no matter where you go, is simple.
      Some people have it really good, everyone else gets fucked.
      In Dubai for instance they even have slavery that everyone pretends isn't slavery.
      Egypt, which can't even muster up the intelligence to create f'ing traffic laws is undoubtedly the same.
      All this project does is provide a shiny thing that makes the lucky few feel good about themselves while they grind their heels into the poor.

    • @mal3k_xd
      @mal3k_xd Před rokem

      What’s the point of seeing the iconic tower when you live under poverty line ?

  • @ViZiX7
    @ViZiX7 Před 2 lety +1

    I love stuff like this. Building, mega projects, and more.

  • @Khofax
    @Khofax Před 2 lety +264

    The main problem in Egypt is education, while the elite do have access to great institutions most of the population doesn't, and the elite generally have ambitions to leave the country for opportunities elsewhere (there has been cases where highly educated individuals where denied exit so they stay and work there) You can hardly make an international city without a penchant for innovation

    • @alexbrands11
      @alexbrands11 Před 2 lety +11

      Главная проблема Египта,то что до 2030 года половину бабок на строительство всей этой херни спиздят!! И уже начали..🤣🌺🤣

    • @rope11
      @rope11 Před 2 lety +30

      @@alexbrands11 Garbage? I don’t see why you would say such a thing. Go have a look at your country first then come and talk about another country. Solve your issues first then try and solve others.

    • @GM-sg5cj
      @GM-sg5cj Před 2 lety +3

      Even the “great” institutions arnt that great in my opinion. Schools anyway, I don’t know much about collages, but the level of education in schools is about the same with public schools in places like the UK and the USA in Egypt the only differences I can think of are the campus school trips and extra curricular activities. The main reason people from elite school get good grades is because they take a lot of private lessons

    • @oxolord
      @oxolord Před 2 lety +1

      Even with half decent education in some fields, there are no work or research aspects for the tech sector.

    • @rope11
      @rope11 Před 2 lety

      @@oxolord they’re trying 🤷‍♂️

  • @maxima9475
    @maxima9475 Před 2 lety +20

    I'm in one of the universities that already opened in the knowledge city ( Egypt University of informatics) and I'm really excited for everything.

    • @Shabab25_74
      @Shabab25_74 Před 2 lety

      هي خاصة و بفلوس غالية؟

    • @oe9953
      @oe9953 Před 2 lety

      @@Shabab25_74 بس يا فقير

    • @officerahmo
      @officerahmo Před 2 lety

      @@Shabab25_74 ...إنت صدقت

  • @UmJustUm
    @UmJustUm Před 2 lety

    This is extremely well researched

  • @imjody
    @imjody Před rokem +2

    Egypt has WAY more money than I had thought. These are some serious goals.

  • @medotalabe
    @medotalabe Před 2 lety +109

    The video didn’t mention the 60 km long smart monorail line in the new capital that will open for commuters in late 2022 connecting the new capital to Cairo’s metro lines. There is also an electric LRT train in the new capital which will connect its neighbourhoods to the newer cities around it mentioned in the video (it will connect all of the industrial hubs east of Cairo, west of the Suez Canal economic zone and going through the New Capital). That LRT line is done and currently going through trials in order to open in early 2022. There is also Egypt’s first high speed rail line which starts in the Red Sea port of Ain Sokhna going through the New Capital, then Cairo then 6th of October all the way to Alexandria on the Mediterranean Sea. The high speed rail work began mid 2021 and should be finished in 2023. All of the above modes of transport connect in a single node in the New Capital’s central transportation station which will be in the centre of the city, close to the downtown and will also be the main hub for the green buses in the city allowing easy transfer between lines. This city also has Egypt’s first bike friendly road network so people could cycle in the streets to anywhere they want to go! Besides that every residential neighbourhood in the city has a little “green valley or wadi” which are small mixed use green areas/parks which are connected to the Green River Central Park (which bisects the city in two), meaning you can go anywhere in the city by walking on the trails in this network of parks and pedestrian areas...
    Regarding some of the misinformed comments I saw here, sometimes I think westerners just don’t want to see developing countries like rise economically even though some of these developing “third world” countries were the birthplace of human civilizations like China, Egypt, India etc...

    • @anantpathak2899
      @anantpathak2899 Před 2 lety +10

      as the developed nations are moving away from the automobile, the third world seems to embrace it. Third world countries love to copy the worst parts of auto-oriented American urban planning which even America is moving away from in order to densify its cities. It seems like the third world is always behind the trend.....

    • @user-or1rm1ol3q
      @user-or1rm1ol3q Před 2 lety +9

      @@anantpathak2899 by 2030 Egypt will be come a green energy country dummy uses everything with clean energy

    • @anantpathak2899
      @anantpathak2899 Před 2 lety +10

      @@user-or1rm1ol3q All countries that try to make a new capital from scratch struggle to infuse the city with organic charecter and life. On top of this the cities are always reliant on cars. Why dont you Egyptians take pride in the historical streetscape of Cairo, make it better and emulate it for your new capital instead of copying the worst of outdated 1960s american suburban planning.

    • @MattPerdeck
      @MattPerdeck Před 2 lety +2

      In addition to buses, will this city have higher capacity public transport, such as a metro system?

    • @medotalabe
      @medotalabe Před 2 lety +8

      @@MattPerdeck yes, the first metro line is made of light rail transit electric trains which were installed in October and are undergoing testing in order to open early 2022. There are I believe 11 stations in the new capital in that line which also branches out into near cities east of Cairo. The second line connects with the LRT line in the new capital main transportation station, but it is a monorail line which is stated to open late 2022, the piers for the monorail and its controlling systems are already installed with some of the monorail cars being installed by bombardier last month for testing.

  • @Nightmare-xf5co
    @Nightmare-xf5co Před 2 lety +81

    I'm loving how Egypt is really taking in the ancient ancestry in they're building

    • @ariadarabi
      @ariadarabi Před 2 lety +17

      Their ancestors smile upon them.

    • @saheb-jg9nj
      @saheb-jg9nj Před 2 lety +5

      There ancestors were pagans

    • @varoonnone7159
      @varoonnone7159 Před 2 lety +6

      @@saheb-jg9nj And it's a pity they became monotheists. Paganism was the rootcause of all the ancient civilisations' greatness

    • @pR-mb3mp
      @pR-mb3mp Před 2 lety +2

      @@saheb-jg9nj that literally every one ancestors

    • @Dog-op4mk
      @Dog-op4mk Před 2 lety

      thankfully. imagine they would make a new dubai. would be horrible

  • @supermegajoseph
    @supermegajoseph Před 5 měsíci

    Im on a random night binge of Neo after they were recommended by the algorithm, and I did not expect a map with the Ontario Science Center and Scarborough randomly thrown in. Wagwan fam lol.

  • @rolandruesch6862
    @rolandruesch6862 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I was in Cairo about six years ago and the biggest problem was not the traffic, it was the garbage. It piled up everywhere and our guide lived in a neighborhood that had a guards patrolling around the clock that no outsider could dump their garbage there. I hope, they are planning for those problems, too.

  • @DevSarman
    @DevSarman Před 2 lety +79

    Egypt: the pioneer and venue of megaprojects since 3000 BC

    • @peterrooke5336
      @peterrooke5336 Před 2 lety +4

      But not with the same people

    • @servantofbubastis9732
      @servantofbubastis9732 Před 2 lety +8

      @@peterrooke5336 Yes they were some joggers from Detroit, right?

    • @desertpeon7831
      @desertpeon7831 Před 2 lety +20

      @@peterrooke5336 same people same land, only a buffooon thinks otherwise.

    • @viniciusyugulis7278
      @viniciusyugulis7278 Před 2 lety +1

      @@desertpeon7831 he's probably one of these nazi s**theads who think ancient Egyptians and Sumerians were nordic white

    • @ahmedm303
      @ahmedm303 Před 2 lety +21

      @@peterrooke5336 you are probably a black .. you guys the only ones that have this theory about us.. because you are trying to belong to any civilization to makeup for the oppression in your history by the Europeans.. but you picked the wrong civilization to stick yourself to it

  • @Silax77
    @Silax77 Před 2 lety +487

    It really looks like the city of the future, like a futuristic ancient egyptian city.
    Let's just hope it's not going to be another Dubai.

    • @Mai_TS--_--
      @Mai_TS--_-- Před 2 lety +38

      This video really set this city as some Dubai in the making for some reason..but okay, they failed to mention the densely populated areas around the city and never-ending ports being built for the suez canal...and the facts that it's perfectly built to connect three of the biggest cities in the country and one of the richest and is going to be the heart of the country in every way shape and form

    • @zoldyck.q
      @zoldyck.q Před 2 lety +17

      Yea I hope it's not going to be like Dubai too

    • @lordwar4585
      @lordwar4585 Před 2 lety +6

      What is wrong with dubai??

    • @nicolainielsen7700
      @nicolainielsen7700 Před 2 lety +84

      @@lordwar4585 It's a façade. It literally feels fake.

    • @lordwar4585
      @lordwar4585 Před 2 lety +27

      @@nicolainielsen7700 true ...no true spirit

  • @abdelaleemedojaoa6913
    @abdelaleemedojaoa6913 Před rokem +1

    amazing video

  • @aGr3atD4y
    @aGr3atD4y Před 2 lety

    This was a very interesting watch and i hope they can realize their ambitious plans

  • @Hosentraeger125
    @Hosentraeger125 Před 2 lety +288

    looks so unlivable, with those massive highways cutting through everything

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. Před 2 lety +11

      I suspect a lot looks like that from satellites.

    • @strawwagen
      @strawwagen Před 2 lety +31

      exactly! looks like something i would design in cities skylines!

    • @gitgut4977
      @gitgut4977 Před 2 lety +53

      Not just unbelievable, also not sustainable. but this capital is build to enable military control of the state

    • @medotalabe
      @medotalabe Před 2 lety +14

      It is actually very pedestrian friendly in the way the neighbourhoods are designed and the way the Central Park (called the Green River) cuts the city in two halves with pedestrian friendly neighbourhoods branching out of it like “valleys”. The neighbourhoods in the city are called “wady” which which is the Arabic word for valley. The highways around the city are necessitated because the new capital is in the centre between Egypt’s most populous city Cairo and the Suez Canal Zone with all its manufacturing centres, so these routes are necessary for logistics and movement of trade goods.

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. Před 2 lety

      @@gitgut4977 What makes you say that?

  • @Omer1996E.C
    @Omer1996E.C Před 2 lety +111

    I'm so happy you made this, I hope we'll see more about middle eastern, African and Asian megaprojects that we often not hear about

    • @LlnusTechTips.
      @LlnusTechTips. Před 2 lety +11

      Most of the worlds recent mega projects have been in Asia and Middle East I think you just don’t watch the news

    • @Omer1996E.C
      @Omer1996E.C Před 2 lety

      @@LlnusTechTips. I watch, I want others to know about us

    • @phoenix2.020
      @phoenix2.020 Před 2 lety +3

      @@LlnusTechTips. I’m sure there are many mega projects in African countries that are being made. Like the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam in Ethiopia, and the Technology City in Kenya. And I also heard about the Dangote Oil Refinery in Nigeria.

    • @phoenix2.020
      @phoenix2.020 Před 2 lety

      @@Omer1996E.C I agree, these new mega projects that different countries are making is really interesting to hear. I just heard about the new capital city in Egypt. It’s fun to hear about great things coming in the future from many countries.

    • @donHooligan
      @donHooligan Před 2 lety +3

      China has reversed desertification....as USA wallows in xenophobia and hatred.

  • @AK-forty-seven
    @AK-forty-seven Před 2 lety +6

    I like this, good luck Egypt. I hope you guys prosper. I'm excited to visit the country one day, and by the looks of how these things are going. The pyramids and historical sites won't be the only places to visit in Egypt.

    • @hia5235
      @hia5235 Před 4 měsíci

      they wont
      egyptians arent free. the junta rules with us support

  • @sizex1966
    @sizex1966 Před rokem

    Cool 😎 video I was 14 when I visited Egypt 🇪🇬.

  • @Sami-jg6fh
    @Sami-jg6fh Před 2 lety +27

    That makes me happy! People of Egypt deserve the best, greetings from Saudi 🇸🇦

    • @sami3566
      @sami3566 Před 2 lety

      You are literally a Bedouin

    • @Sami-jg6fh
      @Sami-jg6fh Před 2 lety +2

      achik ahmed amine yup I’m a bedouin with a history and ancestors who changed your culture and language and religion forever , now you+ your father & grand father are named with arabic bedouin names ! So proud to be a bedouin 😆🇸🇦

    • @willemvanoranje5724
      @willemvanoranje5724 Před rokem +3

      This city won't give them anything

    • @TheWoollyFrog
      @TheWoollyFrog Před rokem +3

      The people of Egypt deserve to be physically separated from their government with the one road leading to said centre of power being controlled with dozens of military checkpoints?

    • @mal3k_xd
      @mal3k_xd Před rokem

      @@Sami-jg6fh your ancestors didn’t change it lmao, without Islam. Y’all would have been barbaric. Sorry brother but you forget tot mention the main thing

  • @hotspot930
    @hotspot930 Před 2 lety +51

    I’m excited to see the new Egypt in the coming years! Way to go Egypt! 🇪🇬

  • @abyssiniaethiopia7667
    @abyssiniaethiopia7667 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent !! it's a good idea

  • @e_a_r_t_h_m_a_n
    @e_a_r_t_h_m_a_n Před rokem

    This is incredible.
    I was in Egypt last year. But I could not imagine that these cities around Cairo city are totally new and were built in desert.

  • @SN-ce5zm
    @SN-ce5zm Před 2 lety +5

    ماشاءالله حفظكم الله اخواننا في مصر 🇪🇬🤍🇰🇼

  • @alhalabi1
    @alhalabi1 Před 2 lety +18

    I'm not Egyptian yet I feel happy watching this. Respect from Syria 🇸🇾❤🇪🇬

  • @hakimcaseirito9027
    @hakimcaseirito9027 Před 2 lety +2

    Fantastic ! I am proud of my homeland Egypt !

  • @NameOfTheChannel
    @NameOfTheChannel Před 2 lety +1

    Now that's goddamn impressive. When construction is done i will book a ticket there asap!

  • @humbertoamorim8130
    @humbertoamorim8130 Před 2 lety +36

    This has Brasilia's monumental axis and USA's suburbs written all over it. Both huge mistakes from the last century. I don't think this can go well, but surely hoping for the best.

  • @semohala3118
    @semohala3118 Před 2 lety +6

    Im so proud f Egypt and Egyptian❤❤ people eventhough im not Egyptian
    Im from saudi💚

  • @mammenmatthew939
    @mammenmatthew939 Před 4 měsíci

    Amazing. If it achieves fruition, it will undeed be a great place. Wish the best!

  • @jasonnoronha7100
    @jasonnoronha7100 Před 2 lety

    Worthy of sub. amazing

  • @The_Horizon
    @The_Horizon Před 2 lety +288

    Please fire the guy in charge of naming all of this

    • @sherio276
      @sherio276 Před 2 lety +17

      Not the final name, only a temp

    • @kenos911
      @kenos911 Před 2 lety +1

      lmao fr

    • @andyc9902
      @andyc9902 Před 2 lety

      Lol

    • @fahmyhussein3661
      @fahmyhussein3661 Před 2 lety

      What was the title ?

    • @dollswithhistory3643
      @dollswithhistory3643 Před 2 lety +12

      This video is deeply false and is an ad by the Egyptian government. This is very clear as the map includes disputed territory only the government includes in its maps. These universities are not being built in the new capital according the schools, their is no 2 child law, the Mogamma closed years ago and is not a traffic issue. This video should be removed or at least marked as a advertisement. Neo should be ashamed for supporting a dictator and dishonoring the Egyptian people.

  • @AmrEhabKamel
    @AmrEhabKamel Před 2 lety +204

    I really enjoyed this video and would like to answer the most commonly asked questions in the comments,
    1- Regarding the transportation to/from and within the new Administrative Capital:
    Egypt is extending the highways and roads within the old Cairo and around it through establishing and upgrading the current road infrastructure.
    Egypt is also extending the Cairo Metro project to connect the western side of the Nile to the eastern side, and eventually linking the Metro to the biggest station connecting all railways: The Central Station "Adly Mansour" containing a subway station, an electrified train station, and a shuttle bus station to connect the Adly Mansour Central Station with the Cairo International Airport through a direct one trip.
    The Adly Mansour station also is the connecting station for the currently in-progress LRT (Light Rail Train). The LRT connects as far as the 6th of October City in the west, to the new Administrative Capital, and all the way to Ain Sokhna city on the western shore of the Red Sea's Gulf of Suez. The LRT would probably expand to reach the new Alamein city on the Mediterranean Sea western of Alexandria.
    In addition to all the projects established/under construction in the area of Giza, Alexandria, Cairo, New Cairo and the New Capital, the highways connecting all the governorates and cities in Egypt have been/are being upgraded in addition to a major overhaul of the railway lines and trains.
    2- Regarding the no. 1 problem: Water poverty:
    Egypt is considering all the diplomatic solutions to solve any conflict around the construction of the GERD in Ethiopia.
    Moreover, Egypt is establishing a huge number of water treatment plants to repurpose agricultural and industrial waste for desert reclamation as "Bahr Al-Baqar Water Reclamation Plant" located on the western bank of the Suez Canal. It is considered the largest wastewater treatment plant in the world (The facility is composed of three plants which were garnered three titles from Guinness World Records, and they are the World’s Largest Water Treatment Plant; World’s Largest Sludge Plant; and, World’s Largest Ozone Generator).
    Egypt is also expanding in sea water desalination plants in newly established coastal cities especially in Sinai.
    In addition to the plans to increase the water resources, many governmental initiatives are on the ground to decrease water waste in homes, agriculture and industry as well.
    I tried to be as thorough as possible. All the details and further information regarding these projects and plans are available with a little Google search. I didn't want to put reference links in the comment in order not to be suspicious :D

    • @dee_hfgblank1617
      @dee_hfgblank1617 Před 2 lety +3

      THANK YOU !

    • @AmrEhabKamel
      @AmrEhabKamel Před 2 lety +2

      @@dee_hfgblank1617 welcome!

    • @Am-Not-Jarvis
      @Am-Not-Jarvis Před 2 lety +12

      Building more lanes and more highways will not fix the congestion problem. It never does. They are stuck in the 1970s with that thinking.

    • @user-xe5cu2wj7i
      @user-xe5cu2wj7i Před 2 lety +1

      @@Am-Not-Jarvis it does actually

    • @abdowael4703
      @abdowael4703 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Am-Not-Jarvis
      so you know the real solution to fix it ?

  • @soleiltounsi6754
    @soleiltounsi6754 Před 2 lety +2

    Very organised city. Very ambitious project. It haven't the great history of Cairo but at least it can help Egypt with the problem of number of population. It's not very far from the other cities.

  • @yaabro663
    @yaabro663 Před 2 lety +3

    Honestly, some of these negative comments are a pain to see, if you were Egyptian.

  • @salmansiddiquefilms
    @salmansiddiquefilms Před 2 lety +16

    Amazing video, loved every second of it! Well done 👏
    Prayers go to Egypt hope this new city bring prosperity and stability in their country.

  • @Guyontheinternet1
    @Guyontheinternet1 Před 2 lety +144

    It would be interesting to see how they solve their water issues or address them with this new city in the middle of the desert and whether they learn from the mistakes of North American infrastructure and neighborhoods. Would also be interesting to see how they fund the building of this new city.

    • @mohammedkhaled4826
      @mohammedkhaled4826 Před 2 lety +14

      uhmm im sure we all know how that will be resolved here. The Nile water will be redirected to the new HQ and yeah the peasants suffering from Cairo's water crisis maybe addressed later down the line.

    • @kreuzrittergottes9336
      @kreuzrittergottes9336 Před 2 lety +4

      what problems? are you referring to the very old and dilapadated places run by democrats for 50 years?

    • @swankshire6939
      @swankshire6939 Před 2 lety +6

      @victor bruun love someone who claims to know excatly how to fix the world but cant form a proper sentence. where are we going to get all the radioactive materials and where is all the waste going to go?

    • @janwensveen1406
      @janwensveen1406 Před 2 lety +1

      Solar energy and Desalination plants. Why use fresh water when you have the energy in abundance to use sea water. Solar power to make Hydrogen+oxigen to transport. Hydrogen and Oxygen burning to drive turbines for electrical energy while having fresh water as waste product.

    • @cugly1875
      @cugly1875 Před 2 lety +3

      @@swankshire6939 modern nuclear power plants are efficient enough so how we get the material is a non-issue and can actually reuse nuclear waste for more fuel. Nuclear has advanced a lot in the past decades and the old dogma against it is almost all outdated now

  • @user-mv6xw5bh8l
    @user-mv6xw5bh8l Před rokem +3

    Very nice

  • @vickyvicky7438
    @vickyvicky7438 Před 2 lety

    What a nice video 👌 👏