Dubai Through the Metro Glass

Thursday, October 1, 2009

My City, My Metro

So goes the ad campaign. It resonates with me.

Dubai is my adopted city, and the metro is a great new way to experience it.


<< The start of my morning commute, past UAE telecom Etisalat's Dubai HQ.

I have just found next to the luggage compartment in the gold cabin a sign indicating baggage size, as follows: maximum luggage size w81 X h58 X d30. This should answer the question of those wondering how much baggage they can carry on the train when transiting to and from the airport.

Best Practices?

My one friend so far at the metro is one of the security men at Rashidiya station. Perhaps it is better to leave him unnamed. I asked him this morning if work was busy, he answered always busy.

What about your day off? I asked. No day off, he answered. Why not, I wondered; his badge read Serco, the company which manages and provides services for the metro. He is a contracted hire, however, with a company called Frist Security or something like that.

It is very typical in the UAE, and probably in a lot of other countries that a large reputable firm wins a big service contract, partially on the basis of their good practices. But then a lot of the work gets contracted out to third companies with dodgy practices.


One of Dubai's central districts, home to Emirates Towers and the DIFC.

The presumed reputable firm does not take the responsibility of insuring that its contracted agents are carrying out proper procedures, nor does the party who awards the original contract. That said, the first and second party will speak of their own best practices while turning a blind eye to what happens further down the line.

So, a security guard works 7 days a week, probably on a 12-hour shift, which is not only bad for that individual but detrimental to the service he was hired to carry out--in this case security.

Bus Shelters

As I've probably pointed out before, taking the bus is an essential part of the metro commute. In large part Dubai's buses are big, shiny-new, comfortable and to my experience thus far--largely empty. So, one can enjoy a comfortable ride, and for me it is good enough to work at my laptop at the same time.

U/C towers at Dubai Marina.View of Dubai Marina & JLT
from Nakheel Harbour & Tower station footbridge.

A lot was made of the city's air-conditioned bus shelters when they were introduced a year or so ago. It would seem that at least half the stops have these, so one needn't wait in the hot sun while waiting for a bus. One problem, however, is that using the shelters could result in missing your bus.

Some are positioned well away from the actual stopping place of the bus and it is often hard to get a clear view of the approaching buses. Drivers aren't likely to stop unless they see someone standing at the stop, so it is often tricky to enjoy the comfort of the a/c shelters while at the same time managing to catch your bus.

Still Under-Construction Stations

There are 19 of these, and regrettably they are no longer making haste at getting them finished, as with the first 10 in the lead up to commencement day. February 2010 was the newly announced completion date for the remaining stations but I think this also may have been pushed back. Fortunately, 09-09-09 was chosen for the original opening date. It was an arbitrary deadline, but one that could not be easily brushed aside.

Emirates Golf Course & the Greens development.Dubai Marina Mall

Gold Class Privilege

As I type I find the attendants attempting to issue a fine to a passenger for traveling in the gold cabin without the proper ticket. It appears the accosted passenger is feigning ignorance as she is escorted off the train. Looks like she escapes the fine, but not without her pride bruised, I'm sure.

So, they are trying to enforce the rules, but I'm sure it isn't easy for the normally ready to please cabin attendants to play the role of cop.

At the same time as the one woman was being chided a few others seated nearby announced this cabin is in the wrong direction as they made their getaway.

They did have a point, however. The gold cabin sits at the front of the train from Rashidiya to Nakheel Harbour & Towers, but at the back of the train in the reverse direction. Most of the seats in the cabin are likewise facing the reverse direction on the train when traveling in that direction.

Cabin attendants guarding the entrance to the gold class section. >>

I think I have become now a frequent gold class rider because I am a sucker for routine. Oh, and the seats, empty space and other comforts are nice too. In business class on a flight you pay at least three times the normal fare. We pay only double for gold. When I have travelled as a rich foreigner in Vietnam I was forced to pay 3 times the normal fare while utilizing the same transport as a local.

In Sri Lanka they have a wonderful modus operandi where foreign visitors to historical sites pay 20-30 times the local rate. So, double fare in gold class is a real bargain.

I shall be ending my metro commute shortly, having made use of the time on the morning and evening ride to compose this post. After nearly 3 weeks of metro use I would say that it is a rather different experience from that of metro use in other parts of the world.


The end of my evening commute, once again past the the SZR financial hub.

The newness, stylishness and comfort (of the gold class cabin especially) is nothing like one would experience elsewhere. We've got the cabin crew in their gold, black and white uniforms that resemble flight crew. There also hasn't emerged yet any preponderance of bad behaviour. No pushing or rudeness among riders, no rowdy youths or sloppy inebriates. It is all a very civil experience thusfar with a multi-national cast of characters.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Tidbits


The Metro Red line running through new Dubai

No metro ride for me today as I had to stay home from work, having picked up something. Some people are warning, don't ride the metro for fear of swine flu. It is highly unlikely I've got the sniffles from either the metro or the bus. Both are normally not crowded--especially in the gold class. One can sit comfortably with good ventilation.

It is much more likely that I picked up whatever I've got in the office or the apartment block I live in. This morning my building's management staff greeted me with advice to drink tea with lemon, which they said they were all doing.

Wifi No Go, p2
(Yesterday's metro news...)


<< The venerable Dubai World Trade Center (at center), the city's first skyscraper built in 1979.

The Gulf News featured an article on the introduction of Du wireless to the metro. Is this news? I don't get it. The rather hapless wireless service has been available since day one. I was hopeful that the day's news was going to be an announcement of a change in terms which might improve the service, but it simply reported the old news in banner headline form as if to herald something new.

It looks fine in print... wireless internet service at various fee structures. But you don't appreciate what any of that really means unless you actually try to use the service and discover that in reality it is expensive and does not really work.

Login takes a long time, the signal cuts out at times, page loading at times is extremely poor--3, 4, 5 minutes for Gmail to load, if at all--and nearly non-existent upload capability.

Extendable trays in the gold class cabin are more designed for laptops than coffee cups. >>

I have used my laptop nearly every day since opening day on 10 Sept--12 to 15 days now--and the service has been consistently poor. I don't get why they are even charging for this, or at least why they don't enable it to perform well with any consistency.

There are two freebees--the Du website itself (yawn), where you can find out all about their services, and the RTA site. At least the RTA site provides practical and relevant information. You could plan out the remainder of your journey in minute detail and explore bus routes and schedules.

You could also try out a variety of games and metro simulations provided on the virtual RTA site--actually I will need to confirm whether this one is also free to access without a Du login.

Other RTA Business

<< Looking through the metro glass at a receding Jafiliya station.

Not directly related to the metro but another facet of the RTA are the driver's license regulations. I am in the process of exchanging a driver's license from Abu Dhabi with a Dubai license.

As this is not very commonly done, there is no specific info on any RTA sites detailing the process. It isn't necessary for most people to do this, anyway, as a license from any emirate can be used in any other. In my case, however, I need to replace a damaged license and might as well do so with one for my current residency. Besides, having a Dubai license seems cooler than having an Abu Dhabi one!

The requirements I have found, thusfar, are straightforward.

            Gold class cabin convenience and comfort. >>

Several things are required:
  1. original passport
  2. photo copy of passport bio and visa pages
  3. an eye test certificate (obtained at an RTA approved commercial eyeglasses dealer
  4. an NOC (no-objection letter) from ones employer
  5. the original license
  6. a fee of 110 dhs
Not so straightforward, however, is upon presenting all of these to one of the several RTA license centers, I was thereupon informed that I also needed a letter from the Abu Dhabi license office. There you go, the stereotypical bureaucratic red-tape.

That is where the process currently hangs. At least the RTA office provided in Arabic a letter which they also placed in a sealed envelope with whatever details or instructions I presume the Abu Dhabi office will be in need of. Thereby, hopefully, avoiding my going to the AD office only to be told that I need something else from the Dubai office.

To be continued...


A shaky low-light condition digital snapshot
creates an artistic impression of the view through the driverless train window.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Creatures of Habit

How many of us continue with the same routine, even when it may not be advantageous to do so?

I recently moved to Ajman, in order to shorten my daily commute to work in Dubai. Yes--shorten. It used to be a 300 km round-trip drive from Abu Dhabi.

Now thanks to being conveniently located in Ajman and with a little help from the metro, my driving distance is only 55 km return. It's a big improvement in mileage, with my car suffering badly from overuse after a year and half of the AD-Dubai daily run.

What I haven't reduced, however, is the time it takes. Thanks to Sharjah traffic and the metro-bus routine without benefit of any nearby stations, it still takes 4 hrs of my day to get to and from work.

When I was new to Ajman I found it an interesting challenge each day to find the shortest (first priority) and fastest route to Dubai. Each day I made my way through different Sharjah routes. Having found the shortest route, I never wanted to deviate from it, even though there were days when traffic made the trip especially long.

I had been hearing that the trip could be be faster on Emirates Rd., but there was one day when it took me 2.5 hours to navigate that road and finally make it into work in Dubai. After that I would be more than happy to never see Emirates Rd. again, I thought. Even during the night when Emirates Rd. was sure to provide a faster alternative, I wouldn't take it. I had become a creature of habit, not willing to give up my familiar route.

So, it has happened for me with the metro as well. It has become a hard to break commitment to park my car at Rashidiya station and hop onto the metro. Nevermind that it takes more time than if I took my car to my destination within the city.

Nevermind that the traffic isn't bad at all on some of the expressways in Dubai and it is definitely clear at certain times of day. Nevermind even that I find I'm running late for work. I've become hardwired to leave my car at Rashidiya station.


Al Kazim twin towers in Media City--new Dubai.

I don't suppose I am the only creature of habit like this. It is likely that most of us are. As to why I am such a metro enthusiast, I suppose there are two reasons. One is that I'm a big fan of how Dubai modernizes as a futuristic city, and the metro is one manifestation of that. The other is that I have some nostalgia for train commutes after having lived in Japan for 11 years. Riding trains everyday to go everywhere is the only way to travel for most people there.

Latest on wifi... The RTA's site, with all of its links can be browsed without logging in to the Du hotspot on the metro. So, while you're stuck not able to get a successful login, even after biting the bullet and deciding to go for one of the very limited wifi packages, you can fully explore the RTA's own website.


Byline Plus 50--a little aside:

Take the anger from a broken heart, feel no pain.

Just picked up this line in an old, otherwise familiar Phil Collins song. Rings true. Perhaps it's the anger that really hurts, not the sadness.

Have you ever heard that free will's an illusion? An intriguing thought I sometimes ponder.

Bruce Dauphin, 50 words

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Quasi-Holiday


Financial Center station: one of the planned 3000 security personnel pegged to guard Dubai's metro system.

Successful Du payment and login this time... finally (27-Sep, evening). Then, a very long 7 minutes before I could log in and get my target page to load (28-Sep, morning)--see also wifi no goes....

Evening train on Saturday, a quasi-holiday. Not crowded at all in the station nor on the trains. Friday is much more the busier day. I'm in the gold class which has some Emirati shebab (young guys), a couple of families with a lot of children and a mix of other nationalities. It sort of seems there are too many kids running around in this cabin. I think the 5 and under free shouldn't qualify for this cabin.

<< Burj Bubai?

I tried the feeder bus today from Financial Center station to Dubai Mall. The bus comes quickly--good frequency--but the route to the mall is rather circuitous and the drop off point is not at any mall entrance. One has to first guess which way it is to an entrance and then start hiking. My guess was wrong, so it was a long walk into one car entrance after another before finally finding a walk-in entrance to the Mall.

So, I doubt many shoppers will make use of this means of transport, especially if they know what it entails. It is a workaround measure until the Burj Dubai station opens, but even then will there be any better way to get from station to mall? A tram was originally planned but that seems nowhere in sight.

More Bits & Pieces

Precariously hanging barricades below sign. >>

An earlier post included a write-up on car access to Rashidiya station, but I didn't have any photos to illustrate the post. Now I do, and I will be sending one of these to the RTA as it reveals the car entrance to the parking structure involving cars narrowly avoiding a precariously hanging barrier.

I will also be sending in the funny RTA bus sign which reads Burj Bubai instead of Burj Dubai. Not a big deal, I know, but it's a shame to mangle the name of the cities' proudest landmark.

The previous post details first and last train timings, and it is rather a shame that the final train out of some stations is just after 10 p.m. That means there is little chance of relying on the train to enjoy an evening out without having to rush to make the last train, especially if one has to get a connecting bus first. I would have thought that the publicized 11:00 pm end of service would have meant 11:00 pm for last departure.


Last train approaching Rashidiya station

First & Last (Metro Station Timings)

Knowing when to be there...

Reading this table:

From Rashidiya station get the first morning train at 6:00 am toward Nakheel Harbour & Tower.
In the evening, get the last train toward NH & T at 22:10.

Rashidiya to Nakheel Harbour & Tower
Saturday - Thursday Metro Timings

Station
First Train     
Last Train
Rashidiya6:0022:10
Airport Terminal 36:0422:14
Deira City Centre6:1022:20
Al Rigga6:1222:22
Union6:1522:25
Khalid Bin al Waleed6:1722:27
Al Jafiliya6:2122:31
Financial Centre6:2622:36
Mall of the Emirates6:3922:49
Nakheel Harbour & Tower     6:50 (arv)23:00 (arv)


Reading this table:

I finish work near the Financial Centre at 10 p.m. What's the last train I can get back to Rashidiya?
It's at 10:36 p.m.
Nakheel Harbour & Tower to Rashidiya
Saturday - Thursday Metro Timings


Station
First Train     
Last Train
Nakheel Harbour & Tower     6:0222:12
Mall of the Emirates6:1322:23
Financial Centre6:2622:36
Al Jafiliya6:3022:40
Khalid Bin al Waleed6:3422:44
Union6:3722:47
Al Rigga6:3922:49
Deira City Centre6:4222:52
Airport Terminal 36:4722:57
Rashidiya6:52 (arv)23:02 (arv)


See also:
What's in a Number
, for a sequential list of metro related number facts.

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American expat, in the UAE since 2000. Language teacher by profession; blogging and Dubai & South Asia enthusiast. Email me for more info or to comment.