The Corniche at Luxor
Back to its roots
Nevine El-Aref reviews plans to develop the Corniche at Luxor.
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Part of Luxor, floodlit
at night. |
Luxor, the City of Palaces, counts among the world's greatest open-air museums. If offers awe-inspiring monuments alongside more homely
pleasures - riding a horse-drawn caleche along the Corniche, sailing a felucca across the Nile and even taking to the air in a hot-air
balloon.
Haphazard development, though, has unfortunately compromised some of Luxor's charms. In response, Luxor City Council launched a
comprehensive development plan three years ago, one of the aims of which is to pedestrianise the
Corniche.
The 10-month Corniche Development Project has been designed by Ain Shams University's Faculty of Engineering and is being implemented by
the army. It is budgeted at LE250 million, LE150 million provided by the Tourism Development Fund and the remaining LE100 million in the
form of a European grant.
Samir Farag, head of Luxor City Council, explains that the project will be executed in three stages. The first, already completed, aimed
at sprucing up the city's backstreets, enlarging and re-paving them and installing new lighting in order to facilitate the flow of traffic
from the Corniche. The latter, says Farag, is to be left for pedestrians "to enjoy walking peacefully within the gates of Egypt's
ancient history and enjoy looking at the vast Nile." Temples on the East Bank, he told
Al-Ahram Weekly, will eventually front directly on the river, as the ancient Egyptians intended.
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| Caleche ride along the corniche at Luxor |
The second phase, due to start in January, will divide the Corniche into three lanes, two reserved for emergency services and the third
for horse drawn carriages. In places the Corniche will be widened to 14 metres, and several luxurious, and very expensive, 100-bed hotels
are planned. Floating wooden sidewalks will be provided so pedestrians might feel they are walking on the deck of a boat.
The façades of buildings overlooking the Corniche will, says Farag, be made of sandstone and lit in a manner that makes them appear old. Both
Luxor and Karnak temples will in the future be accessed directly from the Nile, and docks will be constructed to allow tourists to
disembark. The plan is eventually to restrict transit between the monuments on both banks of the river to feluccas.
On the West Bank a dock is already under construction. When complete, says
Farag, it will be able to handle 10,000 a day. Bus and car parks are also being built, alongside places for camels and horses to be
tethered, and bicycles chained.
The plans, however, have met with criticism from some quarters, with complaints that they may further compromise the atmosphere of the city
which they purport to protect.
Farag has no truck with the critics, pointing out that the plans have been approved by UNESCO and that a delegate from
that organisation is due in Luxor next month to assess the most recent additions to the
project.
To find out how you can visit this fascinating site, please contact Cecelia
or Lindy on
+27 11 678 4777 or +27 11 478 2884 or email us on:
info@egyptandbeyond.co.za.
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