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Dubai world fair closes in blaze of fireworks

DUBAI (AFP) – Dubai shuttered Expo 2020 with a colourful closing ceremony punctuated by fireworks on Thursday, leaving a multi-billion dollar mini-city in the desert and heightened expectations for future hosts.

Six months after the delayed opening of the USD7 billion, purpose-built site, Christina Aguilera, Nora Jones and cellist Yo-Yo Ma performed at the LCD-lit Al Wasl Dome, Expo’s centrepiece, as pyrotechnics lit up the sprawling site.

Millions of people have flocked to Expo’s 192 country pavilions in its final days, pushing visit numbers over 23 million – not far off the 25 million targetted, despite the ongoing pandemic – and making it tough to find a taxi elsewhere in the city.

In 30 degrees Celsius heat, long queues have formed at the most popular attractions, including the falcon-themed United Arab Emirates pavilion and the Saudi Arabia building, a slanted slab that appears to hover in the air.

“It’s been a huge experience, it’s been really, really great,” said Abbas Masud, 66, a retired banker originally from Pakistan.

“I’ve done about 172 countries. I wanted to do all 192 but I don’t think I will be able to because it’s the last day. I feel a bit sad.” Expo, housed on a circular site twice the size of Monaco, has been a point of pride for Dubai’s monarchical rulers and one of a number of projects aimed at grabbing world attention.

Artists perform during the closing ceremony of Expo 2020 in the Gulf emirate of Dubai. PHOTOS: AFP
Dancers perform during the expo’s closing ceremony

Dubai, the commercial heart of the oil-rich United Arab Emirates, is famously home to the world’s tallest building, the 830-metre Burj Khalifa.

In February, it opened a Museum of the Future – in the shape of a silver ellipse decorated with Arabic calligraphy – that promotions insisted was “the most beautiful building on earth”.

Expo, which started with the 1851 Great Exhibition in London and has since showcased innovations such as the telephone and microwave, now moves to Osaka in Japan for the 2025 edition on a man-made island.

“It’s clear that we have set a new bar here – it’s something I believe (Osaka) will look to aspire to,” said secretary-general of the Bureau International des Expositions Dimitri Kerkentzes, according to UAE’s The National newspaper.

Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo and Novak Djokovic were among the sports stars to visit, along with Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and the leaders of France, Brazil, Turkey and Morocco.

The site, with its canopied walkways and speakers playing soothing music, is now envisaged as a car-free “15-minute city”, with all parts accessible by foot or bicycle within a quarter of an hour.

Eighty per cent of the structures will remain, including the self-powering ‘Sustainability’ pavilion and a giant water feature that gives the impression of water flowing upwards.

District 2020, as the Expo site will be known, is attempting to attract high-tech and digital companies to become a centre for innovation.

“It was never an investment to host an Expo,” the show’s director-general Reem Al Hashimy told AFP in September.

“It was an investment to create a new city that is equal distance between Dubai and (UAE capital) Abu Dhabi and really the city of the future.

“That investment goes into a city to 2040, 2050 and beyond.”

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