Home Industry Hospitality 12 stunning new hotels in the Middle East that demand a visit We look at some of the most interesting hotels scheduled to open in the Middle East in 2023 by Bloomberg December 27, 2022 If you’re looking to visit the Middle East this year, a tempting array of options are vying for the attention of global travellers. The world’s tallest hotel. Two hotels in one, sweeping together like crossed swords. One with the world’s largest jellyfish tank. Another aimed at athletes. Rather than going for subtlety and blending into their surroundings, these hotels are bursting onto the scene and demanding a visit. Here’s a look at some of the most interesting scheduled to open in the Middle East in 2023. THE UAE When you’re opening in the Middle East’s biggest tourism market, in a city already known for making the fantastical a reality, you have to keep finding new ways to stand out. That’s what an array of dynamic new hotels are doing this year in Dubai. Hotels are busy—occupancy rates for the first 10 months of 2022 are above 70 per cent, according to Dubai’s tourism department. That’s not going to bring down room rates any time soon, even with cranes and construction workers quickly adding to the supply. At the end of June, Dubai had 773 hotels with 140,778 rooms, up from 714 hotels and 118,345 rooms in 2019, according to design and architecture firm Gensler Middle East. More are coming this year. Atlantis the Royal: We previewed this hotel last year, wondering whether it would be Dubai’s most luxurious hotel yet. The nearly 800-room property is set to welcome guests in February along two kilometres ( 1.24 miles) of beachfront on the manmade Palm Jumeirah. It’ll have dozens and dozens of pools, including 44 private infinity pools attached to suites and penthouses, and two adults-only pools. As for special Dubai touches, the resort will boast a helipad, “fire breathing” fountains, and a tank with 4,000 jellyfish—described as the largest in the world. Opening in February 2023. Ciel Hotel: The Ciel says it will be the planet’s tallest hotel, at 365 metres (1,198 feet) high. The skyscraper’s 82 floors will have more than 1,000 rooms. It’s being built at the north end of Dubai’s manmade (of course) Marina district, a lovely place to spend an afternoon walking around the promenade, looking at yachts, eating, and shopping. Other than that, not much is known about the property, because the developer is still shopping for a brand to run the place. Opening in the fourth quarter of 2023 FIVE Luxe: The FIVE brand instantly became popular with locals and tourists—and known for partying—when it opened its first hotel in Dubai, in 2019. Now the company is opening its third property in the emirate, promising to “embody the authentic and unique vibe that global millennials love.” The beachfront resort will have an outdoor gym, an indoor pool, a paddle tennis court and more. Opening in the fourth quarter of 2023; rooms are expected to start at Dhs1,600 ($436) per night Jumeirah Marsa Al Arab: First there was a sail. Then a wave. Now comes the superyacht. The Jumeirah Group is finishing a 386-room hotel on the Dubai coast that it’s calling the final part of its trilogy. (The “sail” hotel is the Burj Al Arab, an emblem of Dubai.) Beyond the normal rooms and suites, there will be 83 luxury apartment-style suites, the hotel says on its website, all surrounded by landscaped gardens. And a dining concept that will combine four different restaurants into one venue. Opening in Q3 2023. Siro and One & Only One Za’abeel: From the company behind the Atlantis resorts in Dubai and the One & Only brand, Siro is aimed at those of us who are fit and loving it. There will be a two-story gym and fitness programmes shaped by Olympic athletes. The first will open in Dubai late in 2023 in the same tower complex as a new One & Only luxury hotel. They’ll share restaurants and other cafe spaces in a horizontal, cantilevered section of the building called the Link. Opening in Q4 2023; rooms are expected to start at $400 per night. Bloomberg highlights the 12 most highly anticipated hotels set to open in the Middle East next year, with #Dubai leading the way with six new properties: Atlantis The Royal, Ciel Hotel, FIVE Luxe, Jumeirah Marsa Al Arab, Siro, and One & Only One Za’abeel. pic.twitter.com/32TJAxhwK1 — Dubai Media Office (@DXBMediaOffice) December 26, 2022 TURKEY The Peninsula: Peninsula is opening two hotels this year, one in London closely followed by this one in Istanbul, its first openings in nearly a decade. The Istanbul hotel along the Bosphorus will have 177 rooms, including a 5,490-square-foot suite with its own hammam, gym and swimming pool right next to the river. Three of the property’s four buildings are protected landmarks. Opening February 14; rates from €975 ($1,034) per night. SAUDI ARABIA It was only in 2019 that the Middle East’s largest country began offering tourist visas. Now whole luxury islands are opening up, along with dozens of hotels, as Saudi Arabia aims to hit 100 million visitors by 2030. The nation is planning to spend a trillion dollars to get there, which includes an avalanche of marketing dollars convincing the world to look past the nation’s reputation for human rights abuses. And despite lots of chatter about the future of alcohol service in the kingdom, nothing has been announced, and officials continue to say they have no plans to change their current bans. St Regis Red Sea Resort: The Red Sea property will be one of two St Regis is opening in Saudi Arabia in 2023, the other being in the capital, Riyadh. What do we know about it so far? The St Regis Red Sea will have 90 villas on a private island, a pool, gym, spa and kids’ club. Opening in Q2 2023. Six Senses Southern Dunes, the Red Sea: Six Senses is building at one of two inland sites at the Red Sea development. The luxury brand’s first property in Saudi Arabia will be a desert retreat and spa with 76 rooms and an “artisan village” with arts, crafts, dance and music. Opening in early 2023; rates from $899 per night, including breakfast for two. Nujuma, a Ritz-Carlton Reserve: The fifth Ritz-Carlton Reserve in the world, and the first in the Middle East, will be part of the Red Sea project. Sixty-three villas will be spread across a chain of private islands, and guests can enjoy the amenities you’d expect: a spa, swimming pool and restaurants. Opening in Q3 2023. QATAR The tiny Gulf state is just coming down from the biggest event in its history, the 2022 men’s FIFA World Cup. In the scramble to get rooms ready for all of the expected visitors, some hotels missed the tournament completely, while others partially opened for only VIP guests, waiting to welcome the general public until after the games or even in 2023. Here are a few notable openings that basically count as brand new: Fairmont and Raffles Doha: Driving past the Katara Towers containing these two hotels, one might wonder if they’d fallen asleep and woken up in a CGI Marvel universe. The building’s sweeping arches are fashioned to look like the Qatari national emblem of two crossed scimitars or curved swords. One half is the Raffles, an all-suite property, and the other is the Fairmont. Open now; rates are from about $1,300 for the Raffles and $521 for the Fairmont per night. The Ned: After opening in London and New York, this members club and hotel from some of the same people behind the Soho Houses picked Doha for its third location. Gareth Banner, managing director of the Ned, says that’s because of the building they were able to get in the city—the former Ministry of the Interior offices on the city’s corniche. David Chipperfield Architects and Soho House Design reshaped the building into a 90-room hotel with an atrium at the centre, a nod to the design in London. You’ll be sure to see its lush 30-metre (98-foot) pool on Instagram soon. Open now; rates from $344 per night. Tags Atlantis the Royal Hotels Jumeirah Marsa Al Arab middle east Qatar Saudi Arabia Turkey UAE 0 Comments You might also like US-UAE climate-friendly farming partnership grows to $29bn TAQA, JERA, Al Bawani Capital to develop 2 power plants in Saudi Arabia From humble beginnings to global heights: Sheikh Mohammed’s journey unveiled in new biography Efficio’s Adam Forgács on local content’s role in economic diversification