Builders tap into Makkah pilgrimage boom

Riyadh, June 13: The Saudi holy city of Makkah is proving to be the exception to a Middle East property downturn, as more and more pilgrims flock to Islam’s holiest city and fuel a hotel construction boom.

The more than 2.5 million pilgrims who flock to Makkah for the annual Haj pilgrimage, a duty for every able-bodied Muslim who can afford it, are witnessing a transformation of the city’s skyline with luxury hotels, high-rise residential blocks and cranes now overlooking the Grand Mosque.

“Makkah has now come of age,” said Shuja Zaidi, vice president of projects and general manager for Mecca Hilton & Towers in Saudi Arabia.

A forest of high-rise buildings just next to the Grand Mosque is emerging, built by Saudi developer Jabal Omar and costing more than $5.5 billion, where Hilton and others will open 26 new hotels and add 13,000 more rooms.

“But there’s no doubt that these rooms will also be fully occupied,” said Zaidi. “The simple growth of the Muslim population more than justifies the expansion.”

A total of more than 6 million pilgrims enter Saudi for Haj and Umrah pilgrimages each year.

The expected spending spree by the government and developers in Makkah and the second holy city of Madina is valued at some $120 billion over the next decade and at the present there are $20 billion of projects underway in Makkah alone, according to Banque Saudi Fransi.

Marriott International Inc and Hyatt International have also announced plans to manage and operate hotels built by Jabal Omar.

That is expected to boost Makkah’s ability to accommodate pilgrims by at least 50 percent over the next decade.

Bringing more Muslims to the holy city for salvation, according to the writs of Islam, is something Saudi Arabia sees as its duty and the kingdom has been behind the drive to develop and expand the city, despite grumblings by detractors.

“This is an absolute contradiction to the nature of Makkah and the sacredness of the House of God,” Sami Angawi, an expert on Mecca and Medina based in Jeddah.

“Both (Makkah and Madina) are historically almost finished. You cannot go around a central area, and you do not find anything except skyscrapers.”

The world’s largest clock tower, in the style of Big Ben, now towers over a high-rise hotel facing the Kaaba, the ancient Mecca shrine that Muslims around the world face when they pray.

-Agencies