Adjacent to
it lies the hubbub of Bur Dubai with its crammed shopping precincts
and never-say-die vendors. There you'll also find the Dubai Museum,
the colourful textile souq and the old quarter of Bastakia. Further
down, towards the west, is Jumeira and Dubai's classic beachfront,
a 60-kilometre long belt of sand and resorts, beginning with the
Dubai Marine Beach Resort and ending at the doorstep of Jebel
Ali, the busy port complex and free trade zone.
In between
is the awesome bulk of the new Jumeira Beach Tower, a 321-metre
tall structure shooting out of the sea. Extending southwards from
the shoreline is part of the city: the Emirates Golf Club, the
space-age commercial towers of Sheikh Zayed Road, the unmistakable
World Trade Centre and -- swinging back towards the creek -- the
verdant green expanse of the creekside park. Across the Al Khor
with a glimpse of the dhows.
There on
the east bank is the Dubai Creek Golf Course with its icon, the
sail-shaped clubhouse. Ahead lies the expanse of the Dubai International
Airport with its new Terminal 2 while to the north and the Arabian
Gulf is the centre of Dubai's commerce: Deira and the old souq.
On this bank of the creek you'll find the dhows, several hundred
of them, overlooked by some of the city's most magnificent pieces
of architecture: the Dubai Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the
Bank of Dubai and the Etisalat Tower. Clustered around the final
bend of the Al Khor is the spice souq, the bargain-basement street
shopping centres of Naif Road and Nasser Square and finally --
what every wish list ought to end with -- Dubai's dazzling Gold
Souq.