Al Salam Street / Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Street
Al Salam Street Abu Dhabi — Road, Communities & Living Guide
Al Salam Street Abu Dhabi — Overview
Al Salam Street — formally known as Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Street, and referred to locally as 8th Street or the Eastern Ring Road — is one of Abu Dhabi island’s most significant urban corridors. Running approximately 8 kilometres from the Sheikh Zayed Bridge in the west, it sweeps along the island’s eastern arc past Khalifa Park, the Eastern Mangroves National Park, Wahat Al Karama, and Bloom Gardens before meeting Corniche Road at the island’s northern tip.
What makes Al Salam Street distinctive from every other major Abu Dhabi road is the view from it. For several kilometres of its eastern arc, the road faces directly across the Eastern Mangroves protected area — a tidal mangrove forest of over 60 bird species, quiet waterways, and dense green canopy. No other arterial road in the UAE capital has this kind of natural landscape as a direct neighbour. This mangrove-facing character shapes everything about the communities along the road: the apartments that look out over green treetops rather than urban skyline; the promenade walkers and kayakers visible from the road; the restaurants and hotels that have built their identities around the waterfront access. It is, in a city of dramatic built environments, one of Abu Dhabi’s most genuinely natural urban corridors.
For property seekers, Al Salam Street offers one of Abu Dhabi’s most varied residential menus: mid-to-high-rise apartments in the central sections; the prestigious gated villa community of Bloom Gardens and its townhouse sub-community Faya at Bloom Gardens at the eastern end; and the quieter villa streets of Al Qurm, Al Gurm, and the Ministries Complex in the communities that border it. The road is central, practical, and green in a way no other Abu Dhabi address quite matches.
The Route — Al Salam Street from Bridge to Corniche
Western End — Sheikh Zayed Bridge Approach
Al Salam Street begins at the Sheikh Zayed Bridge — the Zaha Hadid-designed crossing at the Maqta Channel — where it connects with the broader mainland highway network toward Khalifa City and E11 toward Dubai. This western section runs through the older residential belt of Al Rawdah and the Zayed Sports City precinct, and is close to the Capital Centre / ADNEC complex — making it convenient for government and exhibitions-sector workers.
Central Section — The Mangrove Arc
The central portion of Al Salam Street, as it curves north-east through Al Qurm and toward Khalifa Park, is where the road’s most distinctive character emerges. The road runs directly alongside the Eastern Mangroves National Park here — the mangrove channel and forest visible to the right from the road — and the Al Qurm Corniche, a four-kilometre promenade along the mangrove waterfront, runs parallel to this section. The promenade is one of the most popular walking, jogging, and cycling routes in Abu Dhabi, with shaded canopies, benches, and open-air sections used daily by families and fitness enthusiasts. Food trucks operate along the route in cooler months.
The major cross-junction in this section is the intersection with Airport Road (Sheikh Rashid Bin Saeed Street) — the most important junction on Al Salam Street, connecting it to the island’s north-south spine and to the downtown business, retail, and government district. Other cross-streets in this zone connect to Al Muroor, Al Nahyan, and Al Karamah — the quiet villa and apartment communities that sit between Al Salam Street and Airport Road. The Ministries Complex — the enclosed cluster of UAE federal government office buildings — is close to this section, generating professional demand for the apartment stock in the surrounding communities.
Eastern End — Wahat Al Karama, Bloom Gardens, Al Muntazah
The easternmost section of Al Salam Street passes one of Abu Dhabi’s most significant national landmarks — Wahat Al Karama (the Oasis of Dignity) — situated directly on the road opposite the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque. This national war memorial, designed by British artist Idris Khan, features huge tilted leaning plates on which the names of UAE’s fallen heroes are engraved, a museum and education centre, and a reflection pool that mirrors the adjacent Grand Mosque. It is open to the public free of charge and is one of the most contemplative and architecturally distinctive sites in the UAE.
Beyond Wahat Al Karama, the road enters the Al Muntazah district — the home of Bloom Gardens — and the character of the street shifts to villa-lined residential boulevard. Al Seef Village Mall and its outdoor Walk are in this zone. The road concludes at its intersection with Corniche Road, completing the arc around the eastern end of Abu Dhabi island.
The Sheikh Zayed Tunnel
Beneath Al Salam Street runs the Sheikh Zayed Tunnel — a 2.4-kilometre underground expressway section stretching from Sheikh Fatima Bint Mubarak Street (formerly Delma Street) to the Corniche/Mina Road intersection. The tunnel was the centrepiece of a USD 1.36 billion infrastructure project by the Abu Dhabi Department of Municipal Affairs that also widened the surface road to four lanes in each direction and constructed additional interchange underpasses. It opened in December 2012 after five years of construction and is one of the longest road tunnels in the Middle East. Before its opening, Al Salam Street’s central section was among Abu Dhabi’s most chronically congested roads; today the tunnel allows continuous through-movement for the bulk of city-bound traffic, while the surface lanes serve local access.
Residential Communities Along Al Salam Street
Bloom Gardens — Gated Villa Community
Bloom Gardens is the standout residential address on Al Salam Street and one of Abu Dhabi’s most consistently in-demand villa communities. Developed by Bloom Holding and positioned in Al Muntazah near the Eastern Mangroves Corniche, it comprises approximately 457 residential units across six clusters. Architecture divides into two styles: Andalusian (inspired by Spanish and Moorish design, with courtyards as primary living spaces) and Tuscan (northern Italian farmhouse aesthetics). Villas range from 3 to 5 bedrooms across floor areas of approximately 2,906 sq ft to 7,211 sq ft, with private pools, landscaped gardens, and premium finishes. The community has a clubhouse, pools, gym, children’s play areas, community mosque, and walking and cycling paths. It won the CNBC Arabia Award for the best development project in Abu Dhabi.
Within Bloom Gardens, Cluster 3 is known as Faya at Bloom Gardens — 132 contemporary 3- to 5-bedroom townhouses spanning approximately 2,500 to 3,000 sq ft. Faya offers a more accessible price point than the full Bloom Gardens villa market while retaining the community’s security, school access, and lifestyle amenities. Brighton College Abu Dhabi — one of the city’s most regarded British curriculum schools, from Foundation Stage 1 to Year 13 — is within the community boundary, giving Bloom Gardens one of the most convenient school-to-door situations of any villa community in Abu Dhabi.
Al Qurm — Villas Facing the Mangroves
Al Qurm is the district that most directly faces the Eastern Mangroves waterfront along the central arc of Al Salam Street. The community is predominantly Emirati villas on generous plots — a relatively quiet, low-density residential zone that benefits from its mangrove-facing position and its proximity to Khalifa Park. The Al Qurm Corniche walkway — the 4km promenade along the mangrove channel — is effectively Al Qurm’s front garden. Property availability in Al Qurm is limited by the predominantly Emirati ownership pattern, but the adjacent communities of Al Gurm and the Ministries Complex offer similar positioning with somewhat broader availability.
Al Muntazah and the Ministries Complex
Al Muntazah is the formal district name for the eastern Al Salam Street residential zone — the area in which Bloom Gardens is located, but also containing apartment buildings, smaller villa plots, and the Ministries Complex. The Ministries Complex is a distinctive cluster of UAE federal government offices enclosed within its own compound, whose presence near Al Salam Street generates consistent demand from government professionals for the apartment stock in the surrounding streets. The combination of government employment proximity, green space, and the prestigious Bloom Gardens address makes Al Muntazah one of the more sought-after districts along the road for long-term tenants.
Apartments — Salam HQ, Mansour Tower and the Mid-Rise Belt
Along the mid-section of Al Salam Street, Salam HQ, Mansour Tower, and a varied stock of mid-rise residential towers provide the apartment market that serves professionals and families who want Al Salam Street’s central location and mangrove-side character without the villa footprint or price point. Studios to four-bedroom apartments are available across buildings ranging from 1980s stock to more recent construction. The diversity of this stock gives the road a breadth of rental options not found on more homogeneous corridors like the Corniche Road tower belt.
Key Landmarks on Al Salam Street
Wahat Al Karama — National War Memorial
Wahat Al Karama — Arabic for “Oasis of Dignity” — is one of the most important national monuments in the UAE and sits directly on Al Salam Street, opposite the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque. Designed by British artist Idris Khan, the memorial is dedicated to UAE military personnel who died in service to the country. Its defining visual element is a series of enormous bronze-clad plates, each leaning on the next and engraved with the names of fallen heroes. The memorial also includes a museum and education centre, a garden of contemplation, and a reflection pool that provides a view back toward the Grand Mosque across the water. Entry is free and open to the public. As a site, it combines national significance, exceptional design, and a location on one of the most prominent roads in the capital — making it both a daily reference point for Al Salam Street residents and one of Abu Dhabi’s most visited monuments.
Eastern Mangroves National Park
Directly facing the central arc of Al Salam Street, the Eastern Mangroves National Park is one of Abu Dhabi’s most important protected natural areas. The park is home to more than 60 bird species and an extensive network of tidal waterways within a dense mangrove forest that edges right up to the road. Kayaking, canoeing, and guided boat tours operate through the mangrove channels — tours that depart from the Eastern Mangroves Promenade at the Anantara hotel. The mangrove ecosystem is uniquely accessible for an urban nature reserve: residents of Al Qurm and the adjacent apartment buildings can see it from their windows, and the Al Qurm Corniche promenade — the four-kilometre walkway between the road and the mangrove channel — is within walking distance of most central Al Salam Street residential buildings.
Al Qurm Corniche — The Mangrove Promenade
The Al Qurm Corniche is a four-kilometre promenade that runs between Al Salam Street and the Eastern Mangroves waterfront — one of the most distinctive outdoor leisure routes in Abu Dhabi. Lined with shaded concrete canopy structures, open seating, and greenery, it is used daily by walkers, joggers, cyclists, and families. Views along the route look out across the mangrove channel toward the forest canopy on the opposite bank — a landscape unusual in its quietness for a promenade that sits within a few minutes of the city centre. Food trucks operate along the waterfront in cooler months. This promenade is one of Al Salam Street’s most significant lifestyle advantages and a primary reason families specifically seek out apartments and villas in Al Qurm and the Eastern Mangroves zone.
Khalifa Park
Khalifa Park — one of Abu Dhabi’s largest public parks — sits directly adjacent to Al Salam Street and is the indoor and outdoor leisure hub of the central road section. The park contains a public library, the Abu Dhabi History Museum and Aquarium, an open-air auditorium, multiple children’s play areas, Murjan Splash Park (a water play facility for families), and wide lawns and gardens. For families on Al Salam Street, it functions as a free, permanent backyard — one of very few parks in the city that offers this combination of museum, library, waterplay, and green space in a single site. It is consistently cited by Bloom Gardens and Al Muntazah residents as one of the most valuable amenities of their address.
Anantara Eastern Mangroves Hotel and Spa
The Anantara Eastern Mangroves Hotel and Spa sits directly on Al Salam Street on the mangrove waterfront — its address is officially Al Salam Street, Al Kheeran, Zone 1, Abu Dhabi. The hotel is the anchor of the Eastern Mangroves Promenade complex and provides the public access point for the mangrove channel: kayaking, doughnut boat hire, and yacht rental depart from its marina. The Promenade attached to the hotel has 11 restaurants and a Waitrose supermarket, making it a genuine neighbourhood retail and dining hub for the central Al Salam Street community. The hotel itself — over 200 rooms designed around Arabian architecture — is a landmark on the road and a regular destination for residents of the surrounding communities for dining and weekend leisure.
Park Rotana and Al Seef Resort
Two further five-star hotels sit on Al Salam Street, adding hospitality anchors to the road’s mid-section. The Park Rotana is a 5-star Rotana-brand hotel with 318 rooms and suites and six restaurants offering Asian, Italian, and British cuisine. Al Seef Resort & Spa by Andalus provides long and short-stay serviced apartments with one to three bedrooms, alongside a European-style boulevard with international dining, three outdoor pools, a Jacuzzi, a three-storey spa, and a gym. Both hotels contribute to the street’s commercial character in the central and western sections and are used regularly by residents of the surrounding communities for their food and beverage, fitness, and leisure facilities.
Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque — Landmark Visible from Al Salam Street
The Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque — one of the most visited landmarks in the world, with more than three million annual visitors — is positioned alongside Al Salam Street at the road’s western section near the Sheikh Zayed Bridge approach. Wahat Al Karama sits directly opposite it on the other side of the road. For residents of Al Salam Street communities, the mosque is both a daily visual reference point and a walking-or-short-drive destination — its free public entry, extensive gardens, and extraordinary architecture make it a regular weekend destination for families throughout the central island.
Malls, Retail, and Daily Amenities
Al Salam Street is one of Abu Dhabi’s most retail-accessible corridors for a non-downtown road. The primary shopping destinations serving its communities are:
- Al Seef Village Mall — located at the eastern end of the road near Bloom Gardens, with a Carrefour Market, Fitness First gym, Funville children’s amusement park, restaurants, and retail stores. The adjacent Walk outdoor boulevard has food kiosks and an open-air art gallery.
- Eastern Mangroves Promenade — attached to the Anantara hotel on the road’s mangrove-facing arc. Waitrose supermarket, 11 restaurants, Nail Spa, Marquee Hair Salon, kayak and boat hire.
- Within Bloom Gardens: Carrefour Market, ZOOM, Metro Market, and YUM Your Urban Market (organic and healthy produce) — all within the community boundary.
- Al Wahda Mall — approximately 10 minutes from the central Al Salam Street section via Airport Road. Over 350 stores, Lulu Hypermarket, Gold’s Gym, and cinema.
- Abu Dhabi Mall — accessible from the road via the cross-street network toward the Tourist Club Area, for broader brand and department store shopping.
- Lulu Hypermarket — approximately 12 minutes; Alam Supermarket approximately 10 minutes for bulk grocery runs.
Schools Near Al Salam Street
Brighton College Abu Dhabi within Bloom Gardens is the most directly associated school — British curriculum from Foundation Stage 1 to Year 13, within walking distance for villa residents. Emirates Private School offers a combined British, American, and UAE Ministry of Education curriculum. Abu Dhabi Indian School is one of the most sought-after institutions for Indian expat families in the city. British School Al Khubairat and International Community School Abu Dhabi are both accessible within a short drive.
For nurseries, multiple options serve the street: MindChamps Nursery, Edu Care Nursery, Royal Palace Nursery, Little Garden, and Rosa Nursery operate in the community and nearby areas. Higher education is accessible via Abu Dhabi University, UAE Academy, and the Abu Dhabi School of Management — all reachable in under 20 minutes.
Healthcare on and Near Al Salam Street
Corniche Hospital — Abu Dhabi’s leading maternity and women’s healthcare facility — is located on Al Salam Street, making the corridor particularly attractive for families and expectant mothers. Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi — one of the UAE’s most prominent private hospitals and a subsidiary of the world-renowned Cleveland Clinic system — is also on or directly accessible from the Al Salam Street corridor, providing comprehensive specialist care. Mediclinic Airport Road Hospital (approximately 11 minutes from Bloom Gardens) and Zayed Military Hospital (approximately 9 minutes) are the principal secondary and tertiary care alternatives. A network of general practice clinics and specialist outpatient facilities is distributed along the residential sections of the road.
Property Market — Al Salam Street
Apartments for Rent
Al Salam Street’s apartment rental market spans a wide range reflecting the diversity of building stock from older mid-rise towers to more recently constructed residential buildings. Current market conditions indicate the following price ranges:
1-bedroom apartments: Typically AED 58,000–110,000 per year depending on building age, floor, and specification*
2-bedroom apartments: Typically AED 80,000–160,000 per year; larger or newer units toward the upper end*
3-bedroom apartments: Typically AED 95,000–175,000 per year; well-located units in newer buildings command a premium*
4-bedroom apartments: From approximately AED 120,000 per year for spacious units with maid’s rooms*
Properties across the corridor range in size from approximately 760 sq ft for a typical one-bedroom to 2,200 sq ft for a large three-bedroom. Most include built-in wardrobes, central air conditioning, covered parking, and balconies; newer buildings add gyms, pools, and concierge services. For current availability and accurate pricing across building types, contact Address Point Properties.*
Bloom Gardens — Villas and Townhouses for Rent
The Bloom Gardens villa market is at the premium end of the Al Salam Street rental corridor. Current market conditions show:
Bloom Gardens villas — rental range: Approximately AED 190,000–260,000 per year; average approximately AED 229,000 per year. Villa rents have increased approximately 15% over the past six months*
Faya at Bloom Gardens townhouses: Typically AED 160,000–210,000 per year for 3- to 5-bedroom units*
Properties for Sale
The for-sale market on Al Salam Street is primarily concentrated in the villa and townhouse communities. Current market data shows asking prices starting at approximately AED 2,700,000, with an average selling price around AED 4,840,000. Properties typically range from approximately 1,300 sq ft to 5,300 sq ft. For Bloom Gardens specifically, villa and townhouse prices range from approximately AED 3.36 million to AED 7.96 million depending on unit type and configuration. Note that villa and townhouse ownership at Bloom Gardens is currently restricted to UAE nationals; for the current availability of properties on Al Salam Street open to non-national buyers, contact Address Point Properties.*
Investment Profile
Bloom Gardens and its townhouse sub-community Faya at Bloom Gardens represent a consistent and defensible segment of the Abu Dhabi villa investment market. The community’s self-contained infrastructure, Brighton College Abu Dhabi on-site, proximity to Khalifa Park, and the Al Qurm Corniche and Eastern Mangroves promenade give it a lifestyle proposition that is difficult to replicate elsewhere on the island at comparable price points. Villa rents have demonstrated approximately 15% growth over a recent six-month period, reflecting sustained demand from Abu Dhabi’s professional and diplomatic family population. The apartment market across the mid-section of Al Salam Street has similarly shown upward rent movement, driven by the road’s combination of central location, mangrove views, and park proximity. Contact Address Point Properties for current yield data and investment guidance.*
Getting Around from Al Salam Street
By Car
Al Salam Street is well-engineered for car travel. The 2012 infrastructure upgrade — which included the Sheikh Zayed Tunnel, surface lane widening to four lanes in each direction, and additional interchange underpasses — resolved the historic congestion that had previously made the road’s central section a bottleneck. The key connectivity points are: the Sheikh Zayed Bridge at the western end (direct mainland access and E11 toward Dubai); the Airport Road cross-junction in the central section (north-south island access, downtown grid); the approach to Corniche Road at the northern terminus; and the Sheikh Khalifa Bridge toward Saadiyat Island and Yas Island, accessible via the northeastern island grid in approximately 15–20 minutes.
By Bus
Bus routes 54, 56, and A1 serve Al Salam Street, connecting residents to the central city bus network and onward services. Taxis and ride-hailing apps (Careem, Uber, TXAI) are readily available along the road. For Bloom Gardens villa residents, private transport is the standard — the community’s position at the road’s eastern end, while well-connected by car, is less convenient for bus-dependent residents.
Access to Dubai
From Al Salam Street’s western end, the Sheikh Zayed Bridge connects directly to the mainland and E11 toward Dubai. Journey time from central Al Salam Street to Abu Dhabi island’s bridge crossing is approximately 5–10 minutes; from the bridge to Dubai city centre approximately 90–110 minutes under normal conditions. The road is toll-free on the Abu Dhabi side.
Frequently Asked Questions — Al Salam Street Abu Dhabi
What is Al Salam Street and why is it called Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Street?
Al Salam Street — meaning “Street of Peace” in Arabic — is one of Abu Dhabi island’s oldest and most important arterials. It was formally renamed Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Street in honour of the UAE’s founding president, though the original name remains in almost universal everyday use. The road runs approximately 8 kilometres along the eastern arc of Abu Dhabi island from the Sheikh Zayed Bridge in the west to Corniche Road in the north. It is also known as 8th Street and Eastern Ring Road from earlier addressing systems. Its most defining characteristic is the Eastern Mangroves National Park facing the road across the Al Qurm Corniche — making it the only major Abu Dhabi arterial that runs alongside a protected natural mangrove reserve for several kilometres of its length.
What is Wahat Al Karama and where is it on Al Salam Street?
Wahat Al Karama — the Oasis of Dignity — is the UAE’s national war memorial, located directly on Al Salam Street opposite the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque at the road’s western section. Designed by British artist Idris Khan, it features enormous tilted bronze-clad plates engraved with the names of UAE military personnel who died in service, a museum and education centre, and a reflection pool facing the Grand Mosque. Entry is free and open to all visitors. The memorial is one of the most architecturally distinctive sites in Abu Dhabi and among the most significant national monuments in the UAE. For residents of Al Salam Street and the adjacent Al Qurm and Al Muntazah communities, it is a landmark of immediate daily significance — visible from the road and within easy walking distance of many residential buildings in this section.
What is the Eastern Mangroves and how does it relate to Al Salam Street?
The Eastern Mangroves National Park is a protected tidal mangrove forest directly facing the central arc of Al Salam Street. It is one of Abu Dhabi’s most significant natural reserves, home to more than 60 bird species and a network of quiet waterways navigable by kayak and boat. The Eastern Mangroves Promenade at the Anantara hotel is the public access point, offering kayak and boat hire, 11 restaurants, and a Waitrose supermarket. The Al Qurm Corniche — a 4km promenade running between Al Salam Street and the mangrove channel — is walkable from most central Al Salam Street residential buildings and is one of Abu Dhabi’s most popular outdoor leisure routes. The mangrove reserve is the primary reason Al Salam Street communities command a lifestyle premium relative to other central island addresses at comparable rental price points.
What are the rental prices for villas on Al Salam Street?
Villa rental on Al Salam Street is concentrated primarily in Bloom Gardens and Faya at Bloom Gardens. In Bloom Gardens, current market conditions show villa rents between approximately AED 190,000 and AED 260,000 per year, with an average around AED 229,000 per year for 3- to 5-bedroom villas. Faya townhouses typically rent from approximately AED 160,000 to AED 210,000 per year. Villa rents in Bloom Gardens have increased approximately 15% over a recent six-month period. All figures are indicative and subject to market conditions. For current listings and accurate pricing, contact Address Point Properties.*
What schools are near Al Salam Street?
The most directly associated school is Brighton College Abu Dhabi, which is located within the Bloom Gardens community on Al Salam Street and follows the British curriculum from Foundation Stage 1 to Year 13 — one of Abu Dhabi’s most highly regarded international schools. Emirates Private School, Abu Dhabi Indian School, British School Al Khubairat, and International Community School Abu Dhabi are all accessible within a short drive from central Al Salam Street. Nurseries within the community and immediately adjacent areas include MindChamps, Edu Care, Royal Palace, Little Garden, and Rosa Nursery. Brighton College’s presence within Bloom Gardens is one of the strongest single arguments for families choosing the eastern Al Salam Street villa market over other communities at comparable price points.
How long is the Salam Street Tunnel and what problem did it solve?
The Sheikh Zayed Tunnel beneath Al Salam Street runs for 2.4 kilometres under the road’s central business district section, from Sheikh Fatima Bint Mubarak Street (Delma Street) to the Corniche/Mina Road intersection. It was the primary component of a USD 1.36 billion infrastructure project that also widened the surface road to four lanes in each direction and added multiple interchange underpasses. It opened in December 2012 after five years of construction and is one of the longest road tunnels in the Middle East. Before the tunnel, Al Salam Street’s central section was chronically congested — a major daily frustration for residents and commuters across the eastern island. The tunnel resolved this by carrying through-traffic underground while freeing the surface lanes for local access, transforming the road from one of Abu Dhabi’s most congested corridors into one of its most efficiently managed.
Which communities border Al Salam Street?
Al Salam Street borders or directly touches several of Abu Dhabi island’s most established residential communities. From west to east along its arc: Al Rawdah and the Zayed Sports City area at the western approach; Al Qurm and Al Gurm along the mangrove-facing central section; Al Muroor, Al Karamah, and Al Nahyan in the cross-street grid between Al Salam Street and Airport Road; the Ministries Complex government quarter near the Al Muntazah zone; and Bloom Gardens at the eastern end. The Eastern Mangroves faces the road along its central arc but is a protected reserve rather than a residential community. Contact Address Point Properties for property guidance in any of these communities.
Summary
Al Salam Street — Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Street — is Abu Dhabi island’s eastern arc: an 8-kilometre road from the Sheikh Zayed Bridge to Corniche Road that passes Wahat Al Karama, the Eastern Mangroves National Park, the Al Qurm Corniche promenade, Khalifa Park, the Anantara Eastern Mangroves Hotel, Park Rotana, Corniche Hospital, Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi, and Bloom Gardens — one of the most awarded villa communities in the emirate. Beneath it runs the Sheikh Zayed Tunnel, a 2.4-kilometre underground expressway that transformed the road’s traffic flow when it opened in 2012. The result is a road that combines central location, natural mangrove landscape, premier schools, and exceptional park access in a way no other Abu Dhabi corridor quite replicates.
For current listings, rental guidance, and investment advice on Al Salam Street communities, contact Address Point Properties.
Prices marked with an asterisk (*) are indicative only, based on market research, and subject to change. Road and infrastructure information is drawn from Wikipedia, QSi Consultancy Group, and Abu Dhabi government records. Address Point Properties makes no warranty as to the accuracy or currency of any information on this page.