Dubai is set to roll out a major urban transformation with the creation of 152 new parks across two key residential districts, bringing green spaces within a 150-metre walk of homes and redefining family-friendly city living. The plan also includes more than 33km of cycling tracks, central community parks, and new majlis and wedding halls.
During a meeting of The Executive Council, Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Crown Prince of Dubai, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defence, and Chairman of The Executive Council of Dubai, approved a major package of policies and strategic frameworks aimed at strengthening urban planning, housing, and digital resilience across the emirate.
Sheikh Hamdan said Dubai is advancing on a people-first development path that strengthens its position as a global model in urban and social planning.
“Citizen welfare and family empowerment form the foundation of Dubai’s future plans,” he said, adding that the focus is on building socially connected, service-integrated communities that enhance quality of life.
New residential planning model
The Executive Council approved a pioneering planning framework for citizens’ residential areas, designed to enhance quality of life, social stability, and sustainable living, while supporting the Dubai Urban Plan 2040.
The model promotes:
- Walkable, interconnected neighbourhoods
- Shaded pedestrian paths and cycling tracks
- Active, community-focused parks and public spaces
- The revival of the traditional Fareej concept to strengthen social bonds
Open spaces will be transformed into vibrant hubs for cultural, social, and community activities, encouraging interaction and a stronger sense of belonging.
152 new parks and cycling networks
As part of the plan, 152 parks will be added across Madinat Latifa and Al Yalayis, ensuring residents are no more than 150 metres from a park. More than 33 kilometres of cycling paths will be introduced, alongside:
- Central community parks
- New community majlis
- Wedding halls
This supports Dubai’s 20-Minute City vision, creating an interconnected network of green spaces within easy reach of homes.
In Madinat Latifa, around 11% of the area will be dedicated to green and open spaces, with:
- 12km of walking and cycling paths
- Facilities spread across 3,000 hectares
- Housing for 141,000 residents
- 18,500 homes and 77 parks
In Al Yalayis, a new green corridor will link residential areas with recreational, service and commercial zones across 1,108 hectares, serving:
- 66,000 residents
- 8,000 residential plots
- 75 parks
Digital Resilience Policy approved
The Executive Council also approved Dubai’s Digital Resilience Policy, a comprehensive framework to protect digital infrastructure and ensure uninterrupted digital services.
The policy supports the Dubai Digital Strategy 2023 and focuses on:
- Strengthening cyber protection
- Safeguarding critical digital assets
- Ensuring service continuity
- Improving emergency response and recovery
It introduces a structured governance framework, performance indicators, and coordinated public-private sector collaboration to protect data centres, cloud platforms, networks, and user devices.
Executive Council Agenda 2026
The Council reviewed achievements under the 2025 agenda and approved the 2026 plan, which will drive the priorities of the Dubai Plan 2033 across key sectors including:
- Social development
- Infrastructure
- Economy and investment
- Entrepreneurship
- Security, justice and public services
Together, the new policies and planning frameworks reinforce Dubai’s long-term vision of building family-focused, resilient, digitally advanced and sustainable communities.