Dubai is building more than an airport. The Al Maktoum Airport Mega-Project is changing how millions of residents live, commute, and move every single day. Approved in April 2024 at a cost of AED 128 billion, it is the world’s most ambitious aviation investment. However, its real value for residents lies far beyond passenger gates. Dubai South infrastructure sits at the heart of this transformation, reshaping a once-quiet zone into a connected, functional urban community.
A City Built for You
Al Maktoum Airport Mega-Project is not just another ‘new’ terminal. It is a complete aerotropolis, a city around aviation. A master plan will feature residential neighbourhoods, schools, healthcare facilities, and retail centres in the infrastructure of Dubai South. These amenities are designed with the goal of reducing travel times, according to property analysts.
In addition, Dubai South infrastructure covers an area of 145 square kilometres, divided into aviation, logistics, residential and commercial districts. Access to work, schools and shops will be readily available to residents. This translates to reduced fuel consumption and time spent driving. The Al Maktoum Airport Mega-Project is thus in no way an aviation project alone, but an urban project as well.

Traffic Is Getting Worse?
The Al Maktoum Airport Mega-Project will come at the right time in the right place at the right time in the right way. Dubai motorists spent 72 hours stuck in traffic jams last year, according to the TomTom Traffic Index. This is almost three full days of driving. By mid-2025, the number of registered vehicles in the UAE was 4.56 million, with approximately 390,000 vehicles registered annually.
As a result, Dubai South infrastructure is designed to support an increasing population in one self contained area. For residents near their work and schools, and for students in their schools, a reduced driving distance translates to fewer trips taken. Less commuting, less congestion and less fuel consumption on the roads – and the air is cleaner across the emirate.
Get Around, Made Easy
The spread of public transport in the Al Maktoum Airport Mega-Project is accelerating. By 2030 Dubai’s metro will expand to 96 stations with direct lines to Dubai South. Moreover, a proposed high-speed train will also provide connection between Abu Dhabi and Dubai in 30 minutes, stopping near Al Maktoum Airport at speed up to 350 km/h.
Consequently, Dubai South infrastructure comes to be truly accessible without a private car. The new 120 kilometre highway will accommodate up to 360,000 passengers per day. It is part of an AED 170 billion national transport programme. There are fewer cars on the road, resulting in reduced fuel consumption, carbon emissions and time saved each week.
One Million People, One Place
The Al Maktoum Airport Mega-Project is built to support a population of one million people and 500,000 jobs within its boundary. That demands hospitals, schools, offices, and transit in one place. Real estate markets are already responding. Transactions in Dubai South surpassed AED 15 billion in the first five months of 2025 alone. Rental values rose around 20 percent year-on-year. Emirates broke ground in May 2026 on a USD 5.1 billion engineering complex at Dubai South, adding thousands of local jobs.
Similarly, Majid Al Futtaim and Dubai South recently signed an AED 62 billion mixed-use community deal. This deepens retail and residential options across the zone. In contrast, older districts in Dubai face rising congestion with limited room to grow. The infrastructure, with its integrated multi-zone design, offers a real alternative. Dubai South infrastructure is rapidly becoming one of the UAE’s most significant live-work corridors. The Al Maktoum Airport Mega-Project, in short, is not just re-engineering aviation. It is re-engineering everyday life.
Dubai South infrastructure is not a distant promise. It is an active, funded transformation. Shorter commutes, self-contained communities and better public transit are already taking shape around the Al Maktoum Airport Mega-Project. For residents of the UAE, the key problem is not the number of planes that this airport can accommodate. It’s about how much easier it makes life for the people who call Dubai home.

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