TL;DR
- Dubai planted 300,000+ trees across major roads in the first half of 2025.
- The effort cost AED190 million and covered over 3 million square metres.
- Native and ornamental species were used, all supported by smart irrigation systems.
- This project aligns with the Dubai 2040 Urban Master Plan and Green Dubai initiative.
- Dubai Municipality drives the mission to make the city more sustainable and liveable.
Between January and June 2025, Dubai Municipality completed a wide-ranging afforestation and landscaping campaign targeting major intersections and arterial roadways. These were not random patches of greenery, they were strategically designed, coordinated, and carefully engineered to both enhance visual aesthetics and deliver long-term environmental gains.
Key landscaped locations:
- Al Khail Road × Latifa bint Hamdan Street
- Sheikh Zayed bin Hamdan Street × Tripoli Street
- Sheikh Rashid Street (from Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Street to Al Mina Road)
- Sheikh Zayed Road (7th Interchange, Dubai’s gateway from Abu Dhabi)
- Al Khawaneej Street × Al Amardi Street
- Over 300,000 trees and seedlings
- 222,500 square metres of ground cover and seasonal flowers
Plant selection was equally deliberate, balancing native species for resilience with ornamental species for beauty and diversity.
Species planted included:
- Native: sidr, ghaf, neem
- Ornamental: chorisia, washingtonia, royal poinciana, millingtonia, albizia, bougainvillaea
He added that many of the plants came from Dubai Municipality’s own nurseries, further emphasizing sustainability and local adaptation. To unify the look of Dubai’s city entrances, the Municipality also installed decorative fencing using a carefully curated colour palette that reflects the city's identity and offers a sense of welcome to visitors.
Who Plants All These Trees? The People and Processes Behind the Greening Machine
Planting 300,000 trees in six months is no ordinary feat, it requires more than a landscaping team; it demands a full logistical ecosystem.
Though Dubai Municipality has not released specific figures on labour involvement, the operation clearly required:
- Dozens of project planners and landscape architects
- Hundreds of field workers, equipment operators, and nursery staff
- Irrigation engineers and technicians to install and monitor smart watering systems
“We seek to offer a vibrant and healthy living environment that upholds the highest standards of quality of life for residents and visitors, while maintaining a harmonious balance between the urban, architectural, and environmental landscape.”
In addition to flora, visual design elements were integrated, like the vertical lighting poles inspired by traditional Arab architecture at the Al Khail–Latifa bint Hamdan intersection. These lights change colour during national celebrations and are harmonised with surrounding greenery to create a memorable urban feature.
Greener, Smarter, Pricier – What It All Costs
The total price tag for the first-half planting campaign? AED190 million.
That budget covered not only trees and flowers but also:
- Landscape design and soil preparation
- Underground irrigation infrastructure
- Smart monitoring systems
- Decorative fencing and urban elements like lighting
- In 2024, Dubai planted 216,500 trees — approx. 600 per day
- In the first half of 2025, the number rose to 300,000+
- By the end of Q1 2025, Dubai Municipality was managing:
- 5.5 million trees and seedlings
- 8.7 million sq. m. of green areas
- 2 million sq. m. of seasonal flowers
- 6.3 million sq. m. of ground covers
- 1.3 million linear metres of plant fencing
- 5.5 million trees and seedlings
These figures speak not just to aesthetic transformation, but to a deeper municipal ambition: making green infrastructure part of the city’s identity, climate adaptation strategy, and livability index.
The Engine Behind It All: Dubai Municipality
If Dubai’s new green corridors are the output, Dubai Municipality is the machinery behind it, a sprawling civic engine that operates 24/7 to keep the city not just functioning, but thriving.
Established in 1954 by His Highness Sheikh Rashid Al Maktoum , Dubai Municipality is the emirate’s oldest government entity. Its responsibilities today extend far beyond parks and trees, encompassing every dimension of urban life.
Key responsibilities include:
- Urban planning and legislation
- Managing public parks, beaches, and recreational areas
- Operating food safety systems and health inspections
- Supervising worker accommodations and public health standards
- Wastewater, sewage, and irrigation infrastructure
- Consumer protection, product conformity, and testing
- Beautification and preservation of urban heritage
- 2 sectors
- 4 agencies
- 37 departments
- Delivers 150+ public services
- Oversees 800+ daily operations
FAQs:
- Q. Who planted 300,000 trees in Dubai?
Dubai Municipality led the initiative as part of its large-scale landscaping and sustainability efforts.
- Q. When did this tree planting take place?
The planting occurred during the first half of 2025,from January to June.
- Q. Where were the trees planted?
They were planted along major intersections and roads like Al Khail Road, Sheikh Zayed Road, and more.
- Q. What types of trees were planted and where did they come from?
A mix of native species (like ghaf, sidr, neem) and ornamental trees (such as bougainvillaea and washingtonia) were used, many cultivated in Dubai Municipality’s nurseries.
- Q. Why is Dubai planting so many trees?
To improve urban aesthetics, support sustainability, and meet goals under the Dubai 2040 Master Plan.
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