Dubai Through the Metro Glass

Showing posts with label first ride. Show all posts
Showing posts with label first ride. Show all posts

Thursday, September 10, 2009

First Live Report (Update)

It's been a Dubai metro day, for me and I'm sure for a lot of other excited people in Dubai.

On the morning train, all was fresh, bright and new and rather emotional. By end of day I was able to experience the metro in a calmer, more objective way. This, then, is what I have observed.

  • The metro is popular--the trains got more and more crowded as evening wore on. It was standing room only on trains passing Khalid Bin Al Waleed (Bur Juman) station and Union station by 7:30 pm. At 8 pm Rashidiya station was jam packed with the ticket lobby full to capacity with people lining up for tickets. This most certainly were the Sharjah crowds, getting their chance to experience the metro after the work day.
  • The novelty factor is huge--judging by the make up of the crowds, the enthusiasm, the overheard conversations, novelty has to be the biggest driving factor for the moment, and it has only just begun. I predict it will peak over the next couple of weeks.
  • Without a doubt, it's impressive--if the intent was to turn heads, they have succeeded. There is an overall sleekness and elegance to the whole metro system. More than the trains, it is the stations. Each one is different, sometimes in subtle ways, sometimes quite dramatically. I will need to devote several future posts to the stations.
  • But, 10 stations won't really cut it--the whole feeder bus thing should do the trick but not with the 10 stations alone. It's a good start, but once the novelty factor wears off, the practicality won't be there until the remaining 19 stations come on line.
  • The class system--gold/women & kids--is rather awkward--the fact is all the carriages are nice, and if day one is any indication of things, it seems there is absolutely no reason why all of us can't assemble happily in the same carriages. To separate the women just seems antiquated and artificial in the modern, progressive context set by the metro overall, and the gold class thing would appear to have no function at all except for self-aggrandizement. I was in the women & children's cab on one ride and didn't even realize it, nor did anyone else seem to, and by mistake I also ended up in the gold class. I realized it, however, when I sat in the comfy seat, but it seemed so un-metro like to be bedded in comfy cushions. It's quite incongruent.
  • Hiccups?--sure there were some: very few chairs anywhere in the stations, except for at street level where one can wait for a feeder bus (that is quite nice, btw); not enough ticket/card machines in stations to handle any sort of crowd; feeder bus numbers and arrival times given but no route maps; smallish route maps in the trains themselves which are difficult to read when not standing near them; not very many hand restraints or bars for standing passengers on trains to hold onto; no racks on trains for temporary placement of hand baggage (under the seats would be nice for seated pax)--that's about all I come up with as there are so many more things to be impressed with.

That is my more measured, less emotional account of a first day on the Metro.

Next to come are my station images, with this taster of Khalid Bin Al Waleed (Bur Juman) station:


A magnificent work of design and functionality

The Wi-fi Question

What I heard repeatedly was wi-fi on the trains and in the stations. I never did hear that it was going to be free, so I wasn't surprised to find that one would need an account of some sort to log in. I was, however, surprised that it was Du and not Etisalat or better yet a choice of the two. As a Du mobile user I luckily had a scratch card with me--but 20 dh for 3 hours, to be used within only 3 days is steep.

I presume all new Dubai residents with Du ADSL accounts will be able to log in with their existing accounts. But, I suppose the majority of Dubai are still Etisalat customers. So there is sure to be some measure of chagrin.

Here is what one finds when they attempt to login and after they've paid for their connection.



So, there it is. I can't see so many people having the opportunity to wi-fi anyway as you will most likely not have a seat on the trains or in the stations, and for many travel/wait time will be very short. That said, I'll be sure to have my lap top with me and open whenever I'm there!

First Live Report

Time to blog on the return leg of my Rashidiya--Nakheel Harbour & Tower run.

I'm sitting on the Metro now traveling between MOE and Financial Center stations heading toward Rashidiya.

This is the scoop on the wifi commuting. It works perfectly on board, but it is a Du system so you must register with a Du login--Etisalat won't do. Lucky me, I happened to be carrying a spare Du mobile scratch card. For a 20 Dh card I get three hours of usage to be used within three days.

Now about the journey itself. I luckily got on the first train in the morning from Rashidiya. (My photo just taken by another passenger as I write.)

Train attendant and excited first riders (left), approach to Airport Terminal 3 station (right).

There's a lot to report on on the first trip, and its all about thrills.

When the train arrived in Rashidiya station--ten minutes late, at 6:10 am--there were cheers and applause from the platform. Nearly everyone had mobile cameras in hand snapping everything. Once on board the excitement level increased. After about a five minute wait the train started, again to applause. We were the lucky passengers on the first train.

No one cared about the rules. Passengers freely went into the gold class to snap more pictures from the picture window at the front of the train.

Women, men children all filled the gold class and women and children sections. Female train attendants walked the aisle smiling and greeting passengers. It was like this all the way as we made our way from Rashidiya to the end of the line past the Nakheel Harbour Station.

<< Burj Dubai (tower) in the early morning light.

We were accompanied by a Gulf News video reporter and cameraman who like all the giddy passengers took their own shots inside the train and through the windows.

Everyone was thrilled and there were passengers of all types on board. These included what looked like laborers, other city workers including myself, some parents with kids, locals and a variety of other nationalities.

Approach to Dubai Marina ↓



Aside from the timing, which seemed a bit off, it was a completely smooth ride. One couldn't notice the up and down movements along the tracks. It was quite easy to stay firm even when starting and stopping, and even if not holding onto hand bars.

This is it for my first on board account. Now I need to load a few pictures.

Dubai Marina & JLT skyline (left) and Mall of the Emirates station (right).

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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.