Al Zaab
Al Zaab, Abu Dhabi — Complete Area Guide (2026)
Area: Al Zaab (also: Al Tabbiyah — the official Abu Dhabi municipality designation; universally known and used in residential and commercial contexts as Al Zaab)
Emirate: Abu Dhabi
Location: Central Abu Dhabi Island — bounded by Al Falah Street (north), Al Karamah Street (west), Mubarak Bin Mohammed Street (east), and Al Bateen Street (south); King Khalid Bin Abdel Aziz Street runs internally through the district
Neighbouring districts: Al Khalidiyah (west/northwest); Al Manhal (north/northeast); Al Karamah (east); Al Bateen (south)
Name origin: Named after the Al Zaab tribe (Al Zaabi family) — who migrated from Al Jazeerah Al Hamra in Ras Al Khaimah to Abu Dhabi in 1970 at the invitation of Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan. The district was created for the tribe at that time. Over 600 Al Zaabi households remain integral to Abu Dhabi’s Emirati society. Also historically known as Al Zaab Souq or Al Zaab Market
Character: One of Abu Dhabi’s most established central villa districts — wide, tree-lined residential streets; large private villas in traditional Emirati and contemporary styles; quiet and family-oriented; newer apartment towers on main arterials; close to Khalidiyah Mall, SKMC, and Corniche Beach
Ownership: Leasehold — purchase restricted to UAE nationals in most of the district. Not a designated freehold area
Property types: 6–11 bedroom villas (dominant stock); 3–5 bedroom villas; studios to 3-bedroom apartments in newer residential towers
Key park: Zaab Park — community park, 46,000 sqm; playgrounds; near Khalidiyah Park
Bus routes (Moovit primary): Nearest stop: Al Falah St / Mubarak Bin Mohammed St (2-min walk); routes 9, 10, 44. ADNOC Al Zaab stop: Hazza Bin Zayed St / ADNOC (3-min walk); routes 9, 10, 11, 40, 44. Al Falah Street routes: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, A1, X62
Airport: Abu Dhabi International Airport approximately 25–30 minutes by car
Al Zaab — Overview
Al Zaab is one of Abu Dhabi’s most established and quietly distinctive central villa districts — a community in the geographic heart of the capital that is simultaneously central (10–15 minutes from most major city destinations) and deeply residential (wide tree-lined streets, large private villas, low commercial activity within the internal streets, and the particular quietude that comes from a neighbourhood built for a specific Emirati tribal family who have lived here for over five decades). The National newspaper, in a profile of the neighbourhood, described it simply as “a very quiet place to live” and reported a resident calling it “quite posh” — a characterisation that captures the essence of Al Zaab’s position: central, spacious, and private in a way that purely commercial or apartment-dense districts cannot be.
The district’s name carries authentic historical weight. In 1970, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan — then newly the Ruler of Abu Dhabi and working rapidly to build a modern city — invited the Al Zaab tribe to relocate from Al Jazeerah Al Hamra (Red Island) in Ras Al Khaimah, where disputes with the ruling family had led roughly half the tribe, under the leadership of Sheikh Hussein bin Rahma Al Zaabi, to seek a new home. Sheikh Zayed created the district specifically for the Al Zaabi community. Today, over 600 Al Zaabi households remain in Abu Dhabi, considered an integral part of the capital’s Emirati society. The area was historically called Al Zaab Souq or Al Zaab Market, reflecting the commercial activity that once characterised its main streets alongside the tribal residences.
Bounded by Al Falah Street to the north, Al Karamah Street to the west, Mubarak Bin Mohammed Street to the east, and Al Bateen Street to the south, Al Zaab sits at a crossroads between some of Abu Dhabi’s most significant surrounding districts: Al Khalidiyah (with Khalidiyah Mall, GymNation, and the American Community School) to the west; Al Manhal (with Al Wahda Mall and Sheikh Khalifa Medical City) to the north/northeast; Al Karamah (with Abu Dhabi Country Club and the diplomatic enclave) to the east; Al Bateen to the south. This positioning means that Al Zaab residents are never more than 10–15 minutes from any major Abu Dhabi institution — while living in residential streets that feel nothing like those commercial districts.
Al Zaab is Abu Dhabi’s most historically rooted central villa district — built by Sheikh Zayed for the Al Zaab tribe in 1970, with wide tree-lined streets of traditional and modern Emirati villas ranging from 6 to 11 bedrooms, Zaab Park and Khalidiyah Park within reach, Khalidiyah Mall and Corniche Beach each under 15 minutes, SKMC at the boundary, the German International School within the district, and bus routes 9, 10, 11, 40, and 44 connecting the community to the wider city.
Location and Boundaries
Al Zaab is precisely positioned in the central island of Abu Dhabi. Its four boundary roads create a well-defined residential block: Al Falah Street (north) — one of Abu Dhabi’s main east-west arterials, also known as the Old Passport Road; Al Karamah Street (west); Mubarak Bin Mohammed Street (east); Al Bateen Street (south). King Khalid Bin Abdel Aziz Street runs through the middle of the district internally, creating the primary internal commercial strip where the Abu Dhabi Co-operative Society, Shaheen supermarket, and a range of small shops — ice cream parlour, barber, mobile phone shop, watch shop, laundry, perfumery — are found. The Al Zaab Civil Defence Centre is also within the district.
Neighbouring districts: Al Khalidiyah to the west and northwest — Abu Dhabi’s most popular mid-tier apartment community, with Khalidiyah Mall, Khalidiyah Park, GymNation, and the American Community School. Al Manhal to the north and northeast, home to Al Wahda Mall, the Grand Millennium Hotel, and Sheikh Khalifa Medical City. Al Karamah to the east, with the Abu Dhabi Country Club and the diplomatic enclave. Al Bateen to the south, Abu Dhabi’s most prestigious villa waterfront district.
Key distances: Khalidiyah Mall approximately 1–2.5 km, under 10 minutes by car. Corniche Beach approximately 7 minutes by car. Al Maryah Island (The Galleria, Cleveland Clinic) approximately 10–15 minutes. Cultural Foundation (Qasr Al Hosn area) approximately 2 km, approximately 10 minutes. Al Reem Island approximately 10–15 minutes. Sheikh Khalifa Medical City (SKMC) at the district boundary. Abu Dhabi International Airport approximately 25–30 minutes.
History and Name
Al Zaab’s origin story is one of the most specific and well-documented of any Abu Dhabi district. In 1970, shortly after becoming the Ruler of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan invited the Al Zaab tribe — Bedouin tribal people who had been living in Al Jazeerah Al Hamra (Red Island) in Ras Al Khaimah, one of the original pearling settlements of the northern UAE coast — to relocate to Abu Dhabi. Approximately half the tribe, under the leadership of Sheikh Hussein bin Rahma Al Zaabi, made the move following a dispute with the ruling family of Ras Al Khaimah. Sheikh Zayed created the current district specifically to house the Al Zaabi community, giving them land in what was then a developing part of the central island.
The district’s official Abu Dhabi municipality designation is actually “Al Tabbiyah” — but this name is rarely used in everyday context. All residents, property platforms, real estate agents, area guides, and the community itself refer to it universally as Al Zaab. Both names appear in public records, with Al Zaab the practical working name for all residential and commercial purposes. The area was historically also called Al Zaab Souq or Al Zaab Market, reflecting the commercial activity of its early settlement days. Today, with over 600 Al Zaabi households in Abu Dhabi, the tribe is considered an integral part of Abu Dhabi’s Emirati society, and the district remains a community with deep tribal and family roots that few central-city districts anywhere in the world can claim.
Property Types
Villas
Villas are the defining property type of Al Zaab and the primary reason the district is known among Abu Dhabi families. The villa stock ranges from 6-bedroom to 11-bedroom configurations, with some extraordinary properties reaching beyond. The architecture reflects the district’s development history: older villas built a decade or more ago have a distinctly individual Emirati style — ornate, decorative wrought-iron or wooden gates, patterned facades, arched windows, and traditional design elements that are increasingly rare in newer Abu Dhabi construction. Newer villas on the same streets tend to be larger, taller, more contemporary in exterior, and furnished with modern amenities throughout.
Standard villa features across the district: swimming pool; multiple en-suite bedrooms; separate majlis rooms; fully fitted kitchen; maid’s room and driver’s room with separate entrance; storeroom; laundry room; small private yard; built-in wardrobes throughout; covered parking for 2+ vehicles. The streets that contain these villas are wide, tree-lined, and notably quiet for a district so centrally located — one of Al Zaab’s most praised qualities among residents. Villa rent starts from AED 180,000 per year.*
Apartments
Apartments in Al Zaab are a newer addition to the district’s property mix, concentrated in residential towers on the main arterials rather than within the internal villa streets. Studio apartments through to 2-bedroom configurations are the most common apartment types, with 3-bedroom apartments also available. The apartment towers are popular with working professionals and smaller families who want the Al Zaab central location and the community character of the broader district without the villa scale and cost. Typical annual rents: studio AED 34,000; 1-bedroom AED 44,000; 2-bedroom AED 55,000; 3-bedroom AED 80,000.*
Zaab Park and Green Spaces
Zaab Park is Al Zaab’s community park — a 46,000-square-metre green space providing walking paths, children’s playgrounds, and open lawns for family outdoor activities. It is situated near Khalidiyah Park (in Al Khalidiyah), which is one of Abu Dhabi’s best-developed urban parks for active recreation, jogging, and family gatherings. The combination of Zaab Park within the district and Khalidiyah Park on the immediate boundary gives Al Zaab residents a substantially better parks situation than most central apartment districts — a major quality-of-life factor for families with children. Corniche Beach is 7 minutes by car, and the broader Corniche promenade is accessible via the same short drive.
Shopping and Daily Convenience
Shopping in Al Zaab is primarily served by the main commercial strip on King Khalid Bin Abdel Aziz Street, which runs through the centre of the district. The Abu Dhabi Co-operative Society branch and Shaheen Supermarket are both on this strip, alongside a variety of small shops, laundries, pharmacies, and service businesses providing daily needs within the community itself. Choithrams and Fatima Supermarket are the closest dedicated supermarkets to the residential area. Spinneys is approximately 9 minutes away in Al Khalidiyah.
For larger format retail, Khalidiyah Mall — with Khalidiyah Mall, Lulu Hypermarket, Cine Royal Cinema, and 120+ stores — is 1–2.5 km to the west, under 10 minutes by car. Al Wahda Mall (350+ stores, 4,000 parking spaces, Gold’s Gym, Star Cinemas) is in Al Manhal to the north, approximately 10–15 minutes. Hamdan Shopping Centre — popular for bargain shopping — is approximately 10 minutes by car.
Dining
Al Zaab’s dining scene reflects its residential character: neighbourhood cafeterias and restaurants on the commercial strip serve the working population and residents for everyday meals, while the broader restaurant circuits of Al Khalidiyah and Al Bateen are within 10–15 minutes. Nasar Restaurant and City Palace Chinese Restaurant are two of the most cited local dining spots in the district. Kuzbara (Lebanese), Off the Hook Seafood, and Red Lobster are all accessible within approximately 8 minutes by car. The Marriott Hotel Downtown Abu Dhabi — nearby — offers JW Steakhouse and Velocity Sports Bar as upscale options. The Grand Millennium Al Wahda Hotel in Al Manhal provides the Korean Prime Okryu Restaurant and Porters English Pub within 10–15 minutes. Lebanese Flower — Abu Dhabi’s most famous neighbourhood restaurant, open 7:30 AM–3:00 AM — is in Al Khalidiyah, approximately 10 minutes.
Healthcare
Sheikh Khalifa Medical City (SKMC) — one of Abu Dhabi’s most significant public hospital complexes, with 750+ beds, 750+ physicians, and a wide range of specialist services — is immediately adjacent to Al Zaab’s boundary, confirmed by the Al Karamah St / SKMC bus stop served by Routes 44, 11, 34, and 54 on Moovit. The proximity of SKMC to the district boundary is one of Al Zaab’s most significant practical advantages for families and individuals with healthcare needs.
Burjeel Hospital — a JCI-accredited private hospital with 850+ doctors and 55+ specialties, on Al Najda Street — is approximately 5–10 minutes from the district. Nation Hospital is situated nearby the district per Mapcarta mapping data. London Consulting Medical Centre and Al Rowda Healthcare Centre are within approximately 10 minutes. Khalidiyah Village community’s American Veterinary Centre provides pet care within approximately 10 minutes. Pharmacies are distributed throughout the commercial strip on King Khalid Bin Abdel Aziz Street and on the boundary roads. For specialist tertiary care, Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi on Al Maryah Island is approximately 10–15 minutes.
Schools and Education
German International School Abu Dhabi
German International School Abu Dhabi is one of the most significant international schools associated with Al Zaab, following the State of Thüringen curriculum and offering classes from Kindergarten through Grade 12. It is a private, co-educational school ranked among the best schools in Abu Dhabi for the German-curriculum community. Its presence in or immediately adjacent to the district makes Al Zaab one of the few central Abu Dhabi communities with a European national-curriculum school accessible without a substantial commute.
Other Schools
International Jubilee Private School is within the district catchment. Al Nahda National School provides British curriculum education in the broader area. Al Mawaheb School, Al Bateen Secondary School, and Al Murooj Scientific Private School are all accessible. Yas Academy School is cited as a school near Al Zaab by multiple area guides. The broader Al Zaab and Al Khalidiyah school catchment provides access to American Community School of Abu Dhabi (ACS) in Al Khalidiyah (approximately 5–10 minutes), one of Abu Dhabi’s most established American-curriculum international schools. Khalifa University is approximately 10–15 minutes by car.
Getting Around
By Bus
Al Zaab is served by a broad network of Abu Dhabi city buses, with the nearest stop confirmed by Moovit (primary) as Al Falah Street / Mubarak Bin Mohammed Street — a 2-minute walk from the district. A second key stop is Hazza Bin Zayed Street / ADNOC (ADNOC – AL ZAAB, stop 795) — a 3-minute walk from the southern part of the community.
Key stops and confirmed routes (Moovit primary):
Al Falah St / Mubarak Bin Mohammed St: Routes 9, 10, 44 are the primary services for Zaab Area (Moovit primary, explicit confirmation). First bus: Route 44 at 5:27 AM. Last bus: Route 8 at 11:46 PM.
ADNOC – AL ZAAB (Hazza Bin Zayed St / ADNOC): Routes 11, 40, 44, 9, 10. First service via Route 44 at 5:26 AM. Last via Route 9 at 11:40 PM. 3-minute walk.
Al Falah Street (main arterial, north boundary): Routes 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, A1, X62, 63. Al Falah Street is one of Abu Dhabi’s most route-dense bus arterials, and its position as Al Zaab’s northern boundary gives the district excellent connectivity to the full city bus network from a 5–10 minute walk.
Al Karamah St / SKMC: Routes 44, 11, 34, 54 — the western boundary stop connecting Al Zaab to the SKMC hospital corridor, Al Karamah, and beyond.
Abu Dhabi Central Bus Station is approximately 10–15 minutes by car, providing E100/E101 Dubai Express connections and 30+ further city routes. Hafilat card: AED 2/journey on city routes. Real-time schedules: AdMobility app (admobility.gov.ae) and Darbi (darbi.itc.gov.ae).
By Car
Al Zaab’s central position between Al Falah Street (north), Al Karamah Street (west), Mubarak Bin Mohammed Street (east), and Al Bateen Street (south) gives fast car connectivity to all major Abu Dhabi road arterials within 5 minutes. Al Khalidiyah and Khalidiyah Mall are under 10 minutes. Al Wahda Mall and the Abu Dhabi Central Bus Station are 10–15 minutes. The Corniche Road is approximately 7–10 minutes. Al Maryah Island approximately 10–15 minutes. Downtown Abu Dhabi city core approximately 10 minutes. Dubai approximately 90 minutes via E11. Abu Dhabi International Airport approximately 25–30 minutes.
Parking
Villas in Al Zaab include built-in private parking for two or more vehicles, making parking a non-issue for villa residents. Residential apartment buildings have reserved parking for tenants. The district’s commercial strip on King Khalid Bin Abdel Aziz Street has limited paid public parking spots, which can be competitive during peak hours around the Co-op and supermarkets. The villa streets themselves generally have ample street parking for visitors. Unlike denser districts such as Al Karamah or Al Danah, the lower commercial density of Al Zaab means parking pressure is significantly lower for most residents.
Rental Prices
Al Zaab’s rental market is villa-dominated and priced in the premium central Abu Dhabi villa category.
Contact Address Point Properties for current availability across all Al Zaab property types.*
Investment
Al Zaab is not a designated freehold area. Property purchase is restricted to UAE nationals; the district does not appear on Abu Dhabi’s designated investment zone list open to non-UAE national buyers.* For UAE national investors, Al Zaab presents a stable, long-term demand rental market driven by the district’s unique combination of central location, established community character, large villa plots, and the specific scarcity of Emirati tribal-district addresses in central Abu Dhabi.* The very limited sale supply of large villas in such a central location historically supports pricing resilience.* Contact Address Point Properties for current sale availability and investment guidance.*
Who Lives in Al Zaab
Al Zaab’s resident community has a structure that reflects its history. UAE national families — many from the Al Zaabi tribe itself, in properties that have been in the same families since 1970 — form the community’s historical core. Alongside them, a broad expatriate professional community in the apartment towers and some of the larger villas: Arab (Egyptian, Jordanian, Lebanese, Syrian), South Asian (Indian, Pakistani), Western (British, American, European), and African expatriates drawn to the district by its quiet streets, central location, and the proximity of the German International School and the broader Al Khalidiyah school circuit. The community has a settled, multi-generational feel unusual for Abu Dhabi, where most expat communities turn over on 2–5 year cycles. Many of the older Emirati villa residents have lived on the same street for 30–40 years, creating a neighbourhood social fabric that newer master-planned developments will take decades to replicate.
Frequently Asked Questions — Al Zaab
Why is Al Zaab also called Al Tabbiyah?
“Al Tabbiyah” is the official Abu Dhabi municipality designation for the district officially. However, the area is universally known — by residents, property platforms, real estate agents, area guides, and the community itself — as Al Zaab. The name Al Zaab has been in use since the district was created in 1970 for the Al Zaabi tribe by Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, and it carries the social, tribal, and historical identity of the community in a way that the administrative name does not. In practice, all property listings, business addresses, and everyday directions use Al Zaab. For residents and property searchers, Al Zaab and Al Tabbiyah refer to the same district. The area was also historically known as Al Zaab Souq or Al Zaab Market, reflecting its early commercial character.
What is the history behind the Al Zaab name?
The district is named after the Al Zaab tribe (Al Zaabi family), who have lived in the area since 1970. In that year, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan invited the Al Zaab tribe to relocate to Abu Dhabi from Al Jazeerah Al Hamra (Red Island) — a historic pearling settlement on the Ras Al Khaimah coast. Approximately half the tribe, under the leadership of Sheikh Hussein bin Rahma Al Zaabi, made the move following a dispute with the rulers of Ras Al Khaimah. Sheikh Zayed created the district specifically to house the Al Zaabi community, allocating land in the central island of Abu Dhabi to the tribe. Today, over 600 Al Zaabi households remain in Abu Dhabi, considered an integral part of the capital’s Emirati society. The district’s quiet, established character is in part a product of this specific founding history: unlike master-planned developments built for a mix of tenants, Al Zaab was built for and by a community that has remained.
What types of villas are available in Al Zaab?
Al Zaab is best known for large private villas — among the biggest in central Abu Dhabi. Configurations range from 6-bedroom to 11-bedroom, with some exceptional properties larger still. Two distinct architectural generations are visible: older villas (built 10–20+ years ago) have more individual, ornate designs with decorative wrought-iron or wooden gates, patterned facades, and traditional Emirati detailing; newer villas are larger, taller, more contemporary in exterior, and equipped with modern amenities throughout. All villas typically include a private swimming pool, multiple en-suite bedrooms, separate majlis rooms, maid’s and driver’s rooms (with separate entrances), storeroom, laundry room, small private yard, built-in wardrobes, and covered parking for two or more vehicles. Villa rent starts from AED 180,000 per year.* Contact Address Point Properties for current villa availability.*
What bus routes serve Al Zaab?
Al Zaab is served by Abu Dhabi city bus routes via two confirmed primary stops (Moovit primary). Al Falah St / Mubarak Bin Mohammed St (2-minute walk from the district): Routes 9, 10, 44 are the primary services for Zaab Area (Moovit explicit confirmation). Al Falah Street is Abu Dhabi’s most route-dense northern boundary arterial, also served by Routes 7, 8, 11, A1, X62, and 63. ADNOC – AL ZAAB (Hazza Bin Zayed St / ADNOC, 3-minute walk): Routes 9, 10, 11, 40, 44. Al Karamah St / SKMC (western boundary): Routes 44, 11, 34, 54. First services start from approximately 5:26–5:30 AM; last services around 11:46 PM–midnight. Real-time schedules: AdMobility (admobility.gov.ae) and Darbi (darbi.itc.gov.ae). Hafilat card: AED 2/journey on city routes.
What schools are in or near Al Zaab?
German International School Abu Dhabi follows the State of Thüringen curriculum (Kindergarten through Grade 12), is co-educational and private, and is ranked among Abu Dhabi’s best international schools — one of the primary reasons German and broader European expat families seek out the Al Zaab area. International Jubilee Private School is within the district catchment. Al Nahda National School (British curriculum) is accessible nearby. Al Mawaheb School, Al Bateen Secondary School, Al Murooj Scientific Private School, and Yas Academy School are all within or near the district. American Community School of Abu Dhabi (ACS) in Al Khalidiyah is approximately 5–10 minutes by car, providing American curriculum access. Khalifa University is approximately 10–15 minutes.
Is Al Zaab freehold?
No. Al Zaab (officially Al Tabbiyah) is not a designated freehold area. Property purchase is restricted to UAE nationals; the district does not appear on Abu Dhabi’s list of designated investment zones open to non-UAE national buyers. Expatriate residents hold annual leasehold tenancies. The closest freehold zones to Al Zaab are Al Maryah Island (approximately 10–15 minutes) and Al Reem Island (approximately 10–15 minutes). Contact Address Point Properties for current guidance.*
What makes Al Zaab different from neighbouring Al Khalidiyah?
Al Khalidiyah immediately to the west is Abu Dhabi’s most popular mid-tier apartment district — characterised by its high-rise towers, Khalidiyah Mall, GymNation, and dense commercial activity. Al Zaab, by contrast, is a villa district: lower density, wider streets, tree-lined residential blocks, and the quieter character of a community built for a specific Emirati tribal family rather than a general-market apartment population. Both districts share proximity to Khalidiyah Park, similar school and hospital access, and the same 7-minute drive to Corniche Beach. The difference is in residential type and community character: Al Khalidiyah for apartment-format central living; Al Zaab for spacious, private villa living at the same central location. The quiet of Al Zaab’s internal streets is specifically noted by The National and multiple area guides as its most valued quality.*
Summary
Al Zaab (officially Al Tabbiyah; universally called Al Zaab; also historically Al Zaab Souq) is a central Abu Dhabi Island villa district founded in 1970 by Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan for the Al Zaabi tribe, who relocated from Al Jazeerah Al Hamra in Ras Al Khaimah. Over 600 Al Zaabi households remain. Boundaries: Al Falah Street (north), Al Karamah Street (west), Mubarak Bin Mohammed Street (east), Al Bateen Street (south); King Khalid Bin Abdel Aziz Street bisects internally. Neighbours: Al Khalidiyah (west), Al Manhal (north/northeast), Al Karamah (east), Al Bateen (south). Leasehold; not freehold. Property: 6–11BR villas (dominant; tree-lined streets; traditional and modern Emirati architecture; private pools, majlis, driver/maid rooms; villas from AED 180k/year*); studios–3BR apartments on main roads (studio AED 34k; 1BR AED 44k; 2BR AED 55k; 3BR AED 80k*). Average rent AED 141,600*; villa sale AED 6.35M–15M*. Zaab Park (46,000 sqm; near Khalidiyah Park). Abu Dhabi Co-op + Shaheen supermarket on King Khalid Bin Abdel Aziz Street. Khalidiyah Mall 1–2.5 km west. Corniche Beach 7 min. German International School Abu Dhabi (K–Grade 12; State of Thüringen curriculum) in district. Sheikh Khalifa Medical City (SKMC) at boundary (Al Karamah St / SKMC bus stop). Burjeel Hospital 5–10 min. Nation Hospital nearby. Bus stops: Al Falah St / Mubarak Bin Mohammed St (2-min walk; Routes 9, 10, 44); ADNOC – AL ZAAB (3-min walk; Routes 9, 10, 11, 40, 44); Al Karamah St / SKMC (Routes 44, 11, 34, 54). Al Falah St (Routes 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, A1, X62). AdMobility + Darbi for schedules. Al Maryah Island 10–15 min. Airport 25–30 min.*
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