Dubai’s walls – from Satwa to Hatta – will soon be covered in street art, making the city an open-air museum.

A new public art initiative called ‘Dubai Street Museum’ is turning 2nd of December Street (aka Diyafah Street) into a huge open air art gallery covered in beautiful graffiti, stencils and more. The works are already underway, but overall the project will take five years to fully complete.

H.H. Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum, Vice President of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, has approved citywide plans for Dubai Street Museum, that will see public art painted across the city, with Satwa the first place it will happen (in fact, many of the artworks there are already underway).

Here are some of the artworks that are up in Satwa so far:

Satwa cool ✨ #mydubai #satwa

A photo posted by Gosia Golda (@gosiagolda) on

The museum of sorts will fly in artists from the world, while also giving local artists a platform, in order to showcase the culture and heritage of the UAE while also beautifying the city’s streets.

The commissioned artists will all be professionals, but local art students will get the opportunity to assist them to gain valuable experience.

A work by Emirati artist Ashwaq Abdulla will be painted on one of the city’s streets:

اللهم ارحم باني الدار..الوالد الشيخ #زايد_بن_سلطان ? #zayedbinsultan

A photo posted by أشواق عبدالله (@ashwaq.abdulla) on

There’s also a work by Ernest Zacharvic – here’s one of his pieces in California:

416 E 6th, Long Beach, CA. Thanks @powwowlongbeach for this great spot, such a supportive comunity in that hood!

A photo posted by Ernest Zacharevic (@ernestzacharevic) on

So where is it all happening?

The project will happen in many phases, here are some of those we know about…

نرسم الآن معالم مشروع جديد لبراند دبي.. ترقبونا – Stay tuned…

A photo posted by BrandDubai (@branddubai) on

– A total of 16 of the buildings running along 2nd of December Street (which runs from the ocean to Sheikh Zayed Road in Satwa) will be painted by 16 local and international artists. This will be the first suburb to be painted upon, and Sheikh Mohammed pointed out yesterday that the street has been chosen due to its historical significance (both in name and location). This part of the project is already underway (and so if you head down there now you’ll see street art on the walls).

sheikh-mohammedSheikh Mohammed inspects the plans for the project – and to the right you can see one of the paintings on a Satwa building.

– The mountainous area of Hatta will also be beautified – helping to boost the inland exclave’s tourism potential. The works painted in Hatta will all be “aligned with the historical context and physical environment of the region,” according to the Dubai Media Office.

sheikh-mohammed-hatta

Sheikh Mohammed and Sheikh Hamdan in Hatta, which is getting a street art overhaul as part of Dubai Street Museum.

We’ll keep you posted on any other suburbs that are announced as part of the cultural initiative, and will let you know when the Satwa project is ready to tour.

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