24 Hours in Dubai, Feb. 28, 2025

Tony Crocker

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We landed at 7AM, but had delay in rounding up ski bags and connecting with our hotel pickup driver. After checking in, we got a cab for our 10AM reservation at Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world. The Burj Khalifa is not approachable by vehicle. You need to walk through the 13 million square foot Dubai Mall, which had 105 million visitors in 2023. It has 1,000 shops.
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And an impressive aquarium:
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That is a variety of ray we have never seen scuba diving.

The Burj Khalifa has its main viewing platforms on floors 124 and 125. We paid a little extra for coffee and snacks on the 148th floor. We learned from advance research that if you don’t select this option you can wait hours to get up to 124 and 125. They gave us stickers so we bypassed the longer lines. In the waiting area are exhibits describing construction and stats.
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The elevator up to 124 takes about a minute. During the ride the walls become full video screens as viewed from the outside. This one shows the Burj Khalifa partially constructed.
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Near the end the screen view is from outer space.
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We take a second elevator up to 148 and get our coffee.
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View down to Dubai Mall we walked through.
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Islands have been dredged and constructed in the Persian Gulf to build resorts.
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Here the close in crescent island is connected via a causeway.
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The distant islands are the World Islands, the concept being that they are shaped like countries or states. There’s a California Island out there somewhere. Timing was derailed by the 2008-09 financial crisis and most islands remain undeveloped sand, aside from Lebanon and a handful of European Islands.

Palm Jumeira, which we visited in the afternoon, is in the background here.
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In the foreground is the sail-shaped 5 star hotel Burj Arab.

There are numerous skyscrapers viewed from far above.
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In the last picture are some unfinished buildings at upper left.

Port area:
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Lagoon and residences directly below Burj Khalifa:
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On 124 and 125 are some entertaining exhibits. One of them has a video screen in the floor which simulates walking on an overhanging glass floor.
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Then you hear a loud noise while the video simulates the floor cracking.
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We lingered in the mall a bit with a gelato snack, then took one cab to our hotel and regrouped for another cob out to the end of Palm Jumeira, whose islands look like palm branches viewed from above.

The Atlantis hotel there resembles the one in the Bahamas.
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Attached to it is Aquaventure, touted as the world’s finest waterpark. Near the entrance is a surf simulator.
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We passed as I get plenty of the real thing at home.

This tower has one section of water slides.
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The visible one coming down the front is a cross-your-arms and ankles steep drop like some of the towers in US parks. Liz and I also rode a double inner tube slide which ends floating through a tube surrounded by a shark tank.

We did not get out there until 3PM and at the end of February Liz was getting chilled after those two slides. At 4PM there was a dolphin show.
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I had to check out the other sections of slides, which for obvious reasons do not include pictures. The one touted as “tallest in the Middle East” was a conventional curving slide but ended with a steep drop. The most unusual was one where you stand in a canister tilted about 70 degrees where they close the clear door, then the floor drops out from under you. There are two canisters, one of them reserved for lighter weight people who must also wear a provided back brace.

High temp was 80F, so in winter you want to be here midday. The water seemed mid-70’s so I wonder whether it was heated.

Unlike US water parks all of the climbing stairs were enclosed in stone buildings. I’m sure this is necessary if you visit in hotter months.

We had dinner in Atlantis’ Mexican restaurant with over the top décor.
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That included presentation of this ceviche.
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The cocktail in that red heart shaped glass at right was served flaming.
 
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Anybody who reads FTO knows how this day would end. I chose the Flora Al Barsha hotel carefully.
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The Kempinski across the street is attached to Mall of the Emirates, home of Ski Dubai.
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So we walked over there wearing our bootbag backpacks and then rented skis and poles.

Ski Dubai is open 10AM to midnight and we skied from about 9-11PM, conveniently allowing us to see other sights during the daytime.

There’s a mini bobsled run at the base.
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Here I’m being admitted via an RFID wristband.
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It was about $60 for 2 hours including rentals. All day is about $85.

Overview of ski runs:
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The ski area building has a slight dogleg shape so the run looker’s left is a little steeper. My watch measured Ski Dubai’s vertical at 190 feet vs. the 280 feet of SNO Oslo in August 2022.

But Ski Dubai has a mid-mountain restaurant!
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The upper and lower slopes skier’s left were quite busy.
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The extra traffic made the snow more sugary vs. SNO Oslo.

No surprise it was amateur hour so the chair stopped occasionally.
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Thus we opted more often for the faster “expert” poma lift.
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Video instructions for the poma:
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Liz at the top:
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We skied 12 runs and 2,300 vertical.

Two story observation windows:
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Note the fake snow on the overhead lights.

Somewhere nearby is a penguin exhibit, probably not open in the evening.
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Even in modern Dubai, a few women wear the conservative all black burka with only eyeslits exposed, which we saw more often in India and occasionally in Uzbekistan. This lady did not want Liz taking her picture.

Ramadan started the next day, March 1.
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This was indeed a full active day, as we got to bed about midnight, having arisen 24 hours earlier in Tashkent to catch our flight to Dubai. A farewell Dubai sight on the way to the airport for our flight home about 6AM:
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A.I. sez:
In 2024, the Burj Khalifa, while recording strong home sales, saw a slight decrease in the number of sales, despite high demand from high-net-worth individuals, with occupancy remaining strong in the 85 to 90 percent range.

Hard to believe that number but what do I know. Apparently, a large amount of the space is dedicated to apartments, not offices. Perhaps Tony can confirm based on his visit.
 
The power of oil money is amazing!! Never been to that part of the world and never thought I had much interest, but I have a daughter in Jakarta for the next 18 mos so there is a possibility I could visit if I went to see her? There must be a huge amount of tourism in Dubai to support such incredible infrastructure and tourist attractions?
 
Did the cocktail contain alcohol?
What was the general cost of things? Similar to other western countries or more on the high end like Scandinavia?
 
What was the general cost of things?
I'd say similar to western countries. More in the high end hotels judging by that Mexican restaurant in the Atlantis, which would be true in western countries as well. It's like ChrisC has noted for high visibility tourist attractions in South America. Pricing is based upon typical first world international travelers.
There must be a huge amount of tourism in Dubai to support such incredible infrastructure and tourist attractions?
As noted, that Dubai Mall next to Burj Khalifa had 105 million visitors in 2023. But there has been overbuilding, like those World Islands and the unfinished buildings in my pics. Dubai had to be bailed out by oil-rich Abu Dhabi during the financial crisis. As a result Burj Khalifa was named after the emir of Abu Dhabi.
Did the cocktail contain alcohol?
Yes. I did not notice whether there were no pork products as in Egypt and Uzbekistan.
Apparently, a large amount of the space is dedicated to apartments, not offices. Perhaps Tony can confirm based on his visit.
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I have a daughter in Jakarta for the next 18 mos so there is a possibility I could visit if I went to see her?
The lure is if Emirates has a competitive airfare to your Middle East or Asian destination, as it did for us with Tashkent. If you book directly with Emirates you can probably get the Dubai pit stop at no extra charge. I made the mistake of booking a slightly cheaper fare through a third party website. Then we had to pay $200pp extra to get the pit stop. You will appreciate using the Emirates A380 for the marathon flight from the U.S. And unlike U.S. airlines since 2022, Emirates is allowed to overfly Russia on polar great circle routes.
 
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Thanks for the helpful graphic. I see that the building has three "sky lobbies" (transfer stops on the express elevators), which the original World Trade Center pioneered.

Just seeing those words makes me think of the 78th floor lobby on 9/11. :(
 
At Burj Khalifa they take your picture in front of a blank screen, then insert it over an entertaining background.,
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The view down is to the Dubai Fountain, the jets being mounted in the pool structure showing just above our heads. It is the world's largest choreographed fountain, with some jets shooting water 500 feet into the air. Due to our busy schedule we did not see this in action.

The photo package included a conventional Burj Khalifa picture.
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The Kempinski across the street is attached to Mall of the Emirates, home of Ski Dubai.

I have always wanted an Emirates 24-hour Dubai Layover, focusing on Ski Dubai and Burj Khalifa.

To me, it feels like Vegas—a fascinating man-made spectacle. Now, Vegas is only for a corporate trade show or on an expense account. I do want to see a concert at the Sphere.

Turkish Airways easily schedules layovers in Istanbul for 12-36 hours with free 4 or 5-star hotel rooms. Istanbul is a more historical, unique city vs. Qatar/Doha or UAE/Dubai.
 
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I do want to see a concert at the Sphere.
We saw Dead and Company at the Sphere last May; That seemed a logical act for a state-of-the-art light show.

Istanbul is a more historical, unique city vs. Qatar/Doha or UAE/Dubai.
Liz spent some time there on her first eclipse tour, which was to Turkey in August 1999. I was supposed to port call there on a Mediterranean cruise in June 2004, but the port call was relocated after a February 2004 terrorist incident.
Turkish Airways easily schedules layovers in Istanbul for 12-36 hours with free 4 or 5-star hotel rooms.
I did not know about the hotel rooms. Turkish was our other airline option to get home from Tashkent, but I'm sure they would have charged a bundle for ski bags.
I am not going unless it's for a corporate trade show or expense account.
I wouldn't say to make a dedicated trip. But Emirates flights are a big plus if you're going somewhere in the Middle East or South Asia (or Southeast Asia from the East Coast). And once you're on Emirates we recommend the stopover.
 
Liz spent some time there on her first eclipse tour, which was to Turkey in August 1999. I was supposed to port call there on a Mediterranean cruise in June 2004, but the port call was relocated after a February 2004 terrorist incident.

All the major sights (Hagia Sofia, Blue Mosque, Topkapi Palace, Bazaar) are in the old city on the European side (Sultanahmet), not far from each other (5-10 minutes). A Bosphorus cruise is very fascinating.

I did not know about the hotel rooms. Turkish was our other airline option to get home from Tashkent, but I'm sure they would have charged a bundle for ski bags.

Free. You get 2 50-lb bags.

I like to cart dead bodies around when I go skiing in Europe. (Avy pack & gear, ski stuff, helmets, etc.)

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I flew back to the USA on Turkish Airways.

It's essentially any US Airline's Premium Economy, but it's priced at $300-400 per leg during the winter, including two 50-lb pieces of luggage. A steal! There is lots of legroom, good Turkish food, new planes, a big entertainment screen, and maybe 60-70% occupancy. The amenities kit had socks, slippers, a mask, toothpaste, etc.

You lose time going to Europe by flying Turkish Airways and connecting through IST. But for the return, it's amazing—you get another ski day since you can schedule a departing flight from 6-8 p.m. from Geneva, Zurich, or Milan to Istanbul and do a redeye return that night. Or stopover for however long you want in Istanbul—call them to put flights together if you want to be there for 12 hrs to 3 days.

I also like a 12-hour redeye because I can sleep for about 4-7 hours and feel decent.


I wouldn't say to make a dedicated trip. But Emirates flights are a big plus if you're going somewhere in the Middle East or South Asia (or Southeast Asia from the East Coast). And once you're on Emirates we recommend the stopover.

I'm sorry. I meant to say this explicitly about Las Vegas. To me, it's a hell city now - like Phoenix/Scottsdale and Palm Springs. I much prefer to do conferences, etc in New Orleans, Chicago, or even Orlando. I do not like the low desert.
 
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I have so far been hesitant to mix a major sightseeing trip with a ski trip. For those of you who do these kinds of trips, how are you finding the experience of dragging the ski gear around in the non skiing locations? This winter around New Years I was in Vietnam touring. We had multiple internal flights and stayed in 5 different cities. Our flight back was through Tokyo. I considered stopping to ski, however due to my reluctance to drag my ski equipment around Vietnam for 2 weeks, I did not stop to ski in Japan (regretting this now due to the amazing winters there) on the way home. Now I am thinking about the future.
 
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The best way to store skis is in a hotel. Even if you are staying at the hotel on just one end of the trip, they will normally store your skis for multiple days while you are doing non-ski activities. My recollections:
Lima 2007 while we were in Cusco and hiking the Inca Trail before skiing in Chile.
Tokyo 2011 while I was scuba diving in Palau.
Venice airport region in 2022 while were were on a 10-day Adriatic tour.
Delhi 2025 while were on a 12-day India tour.
Tashkent 2025 while were touring Uzbek cultural sites for 6 days.

Avoid storing anything at an airport. Rates are exorbitant and the storage rooms aren't open 24/7. I was not charged at any of the above hotels IIRC. Of course you have to arrange to pass through the hotel storage city in both directions of your travel. In some of the cases, one of the hotel stops was a drive-by drop off or pick up. I have not had the case of dropping off during an airport layover, which would involve claiming and rechecking luggage.

Hauling just boots and clothing and renting skis can be an option. That's what we did in Lesotho, since the skiing was only one day out of a month of travel and we needed warm clothing anyway for winter sunrise safaris. I recommend this plan for Australia/New Zealand too, as you can get good demos there, and I tend to do a lot of non-ski activities on those trips.

Obviously you can get excellent demos in Europe, so if you are skiing just a week in one place, that's a scenario for not bringing skis. We never do it that way because we are nearly always going multiple places in a rental car, where we just leave the skis when doing other tourism.

When I first went to Japan I head that westerners might have problems getting appropriate sized skis. And of course you want powder skis over there, as I used mine 22 out of 23 total ski days. Niseko is quite westernized by the Aussies, so maybe you can get good demos now, but I would inquire ahead. If you're going off the beaten track, best have your own skis. That applies in particular to South America.

Virtually any tropical Asian destination combines perfectly with skiing Japan in January. It's not an accident that Japan-Palau trip was my first of retirement. We thought about Japan a little this year, but were lured by Uzbekistan since it is so close to India and so far from home.
 
The best way to store skis is in a hotel. Even if you are staying at the hotel on just one end of the trip, they will normally store your skis for multiple days while you are doing non-ski activities. My recollections:
Lima 2007 while we were in Cusco and hiking the Inca Trail before skiing in Chile.
Tokyo 2011 while I was scuba diving in Palau.
Venice airport region in 2022 while were were on a 10-day Adriatic tour.
Delhi 2025 while were on a 12-day India tour.
Tashkent 2025 while were touring Uzbek cultural sites for 6 days.

Tony seems like a pro at this. I never contemplated storing skis at a hotel for more than 24 hours.

Avoid storing anything at an airport. Rates are exorbitant and the storage rooms aren't open 24/7. I was not charged at any of the above hotels IIRC. Of course you have to arrange to pass through the hotel storage city in both directions of your travel. In some of the cases, one of the hotel stops was a drive-by drop off or pick up. I have not had the case of dropping off during an airport layover, which would involve claiming and rechecking luggage.

I have used airport storage before:
  • Tokyo Narita 2020: I was not dragging skis on trains/subways through Tokyo. I stored my giant ski cadaver bag at Narita airport for 2-3 days at Luggage Storage ($7/day for large bag, open 6:30 am to 12 midnight)
  • Summer Olympics Rio de Janeiro 2016. Skied Chile - Portillo and Valle Nevado, La Parva & El Colorado - then went onto Rio to stored skis at the airport for $6/day - open 24 hours/day. Maybe 5 days?
I do airport storage because I do not trust finding a big cab or dragging stuff through cities.

For winter work trips to Scandanavia/Finland, I would bring my ski bag to any corporate housing/hotel.

Summer 2004: I skied Zermatt-Cevinia one day and rented skis and boots - during a multi-week trip. I also lugged ski shells to Europe.
 
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This winter around New Years I was in Vietnam touring. We had multiple internal flights and stayed in 5 different cities. Our flight back was through Tokyo. I considered stopping to ski, however due to my reluctance to drag my ski equipment around Vietnam for 2 weeks, I did not stop to ski in Japan (regretting this now due to the amazing winters there) on the way home. Now I am thinking about the future.

I rented touring skis in Niseko, Japan, and brought my downhill skis. In 2020, finding great alpine touring setups in Niseko was very easy. My other friend rented a split board. Josh and I are 6-4/6-3, respectively, and it is easy to find the correct sizes. You can book everything online before visiting.

You could likely bring boots and store them for $5/day - locker or retail store front.

That applies in particular to South America.

South America is the land of horrible/crap ski rentals. My brother sells all his three or 5-year-old gear to South American outlets, and they are so happy to get it! Or Internet retailers based in West Coast USA.

Obviously you can get excellent demos in Europe, so if you are skiing just a week in one place, that's a scenario for not bringing skis.

Or if you have a partner who refuses to lug a ski bag anywhere—who is a great skier but refuses to travel with anything gear-wise. So you are stuck in one place for an entire trip - or at least days.
 
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It sounds like the main key is flying in and out of the same location in touring location. I did not do this with Vietnam (flying into Hanoi and out of Ho Chi Minh City). However this is something that I can certainly do in the future.
 
It sounds like the main key is flying in and out of the same location in touring location. I did not do this with Vietnam (flying into Hanoi and out of Ho Chi Minh City). However this is something that I can certainly do in the future.

There are so many cheap one-way flights on Asian airlines. Big Decision is the gateway city.
 
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