Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • WATCH
    • LISTEN
    • EVENTS CALENDAR
    • عربي
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    Scoop Empire
    • News

      What’s Happening Between Iran and Israel? Here’s a Breakdown of the Escalation

      June 15, 2025

      Suspected Illegal Excavation Uncovered At Luxor’s Child Culture Palace

      June 1, 2025

      Three Ancient Tombs Unearthed In Luxor After 3,500 Years

      May 27, 2025

      Hewi Dubai: How Old-School Neighborhoods Are Shaping the Future of the City

      May 6, 2025

      UAE Schools to Teach AI at Every Grade Level: Here’s What Students Will Learn

      May 5, 2025
    • Arts

      8 Classic Egyptian Movies Gen Z Totally Slept On

      June 14, 2025

      One-Location Egyptian Films That Prove Less Is More

      June 13, 2025

      Warning: These Arabic Films Will Leave You Broken

      June 11, 2025

      Falling for Alexandria, One Scene at a Time: 7 Picks That Capture the City’s Soul

      June 10, 2025

      Wind Down This Eid With These Feel-Good Films

      June 9, 2025
    • Events

      Who’s On Stage? July Concerts Lighting Up the Middle East

      June 17, 2025

      Who’s Performing and Where: The Hottest Eid Al-Adha Concerts Across the Region

      June 5, 2025

      Eid Al-Adha 2025: Events Worth Leaving the House For

      June 4, 2025

      From Mawazine to Jazzablanca: 5 Moroccan Festivals to Add to Your Summer Plans

      May 23, 2025

      UAE’s Got Plans: Some of the Biggest Comedy and Concerts Still to Come in 2025

      May 20, 2025
    • Business

      The UAE Launches The Region’s First Finfluencer License — Here’s What You Need To Know

      May 28, 2025

      Starting With Saudi Arabia: Inside Day One of Trump’s Middle East Tour

      May 13, 2025

      From Humble Beginnings to Millionaire Success: These Self-Made Tycoons Are Making Waves in the UAE

      May 12, 2025

      Buzzing in New Cairo: Msquared’s MIST Combines Eco Lakes, Smart Homes, and Walkable Living

      May 4, 2025

      Murals, Greenery & More: Paving the Way to the Grand Egyptian Museum

      April 14, 2025
    • Food

      The World’s Most Beautiful Restaurants? These 3 Middle Eastern Spots Just Made the Cut

      June 17, 2025

      Craving Seafood by the Sea? The North Coast’s Got You

      June 10, 2025

      Where to Dine This Eid: Authentic Egyptian Spots You’ll Love

      June 8, 2025

      Fatteh Rules Eid Al-Adha: Egypt’s OG Dish and Its Levantine Twists

      June 7, 2025

      This World Environment Day, Check Out These Eco-Friendly Spots Across the Region

      June 5, 2025
    • Travel

      These 3 Middle Eastern Hotels Recently Won ‘World’s Most Beautiful’ — and It Totally Makes Sense

      June 17, 2025

      5 Private Beaches in Jeddah Worth Escaping To This Summer

      June 16, 2025

      Where the Party’s At: The Top Spots Lighting Up Sahel Every Summer

      June 16, 2025

      Warning: This Gouna Bachelorette Weekend Might Break the Group Chat

      June 14, 2025

      Spending a Weekend in Alex? Here’s How to Museum-Hop Like a Pro

      June 11, 2025
    • Fashion

      One Shade Ahead: Gourmand Browns Is L’Oréal Professionnel’s Hottest Hair Trend for 2025

      June 4, 2025

      Hands Down Iconic: The Coolest Henna Studios Around the Region

      June 2, 2025

      Where to Cop the Cutest Beach Bags in Egypt This Summer

      May 31, 2025

      Saudi Designer Looks That Turned Heads at Cannes 2025

      May 21, 2025

      From Cannes to the Oscars: 7 Iconic Hijabi Moments That Owned the Red Carpet

      May 19, 2025
    • Health

      No Stress, Just Spas: Where to Unwind This Eid in Cairo

      June 8, 2025

      Treat Yourself: Where to Book Your Next Spa Day in the UAE

      May 11, 2025

      Injured at Work in Egypt? Here’s What You Need to Know About Your Rights

      May 4, 2025

      A Regional First: Abu Dhabi to Begin Building Heavy-Ion Cancer Center in 2026

      April 17, 2025

      From 20% to 80% Prevention: Egypt’s Bold Leap in Hemophilia Treatment

      April 15, 2025
    • Sports

      From Mohamed Farrag to Khaled Selim: Who Cheered On Al Ahly at the FIFA Club World Cup

      June 15, 2025

      Athletes Who Took a Stand for Palestine—Year After Year

      June 1, 2025

      Level Up Your Sportswear Game With Egypt’s Hottest Local Brands

      May 30, 2025

      Tee Up in Style: Where to Play Golf in the UAE

      May 20, 2025

      5 Go-Karting Spots That’ll Fuel Your Need for Speed

      May 19, 2025
    • Tech

      Handy Apps That Can Make Your Hajj Journey Smoother

      June 3, 2025

      Jubail’s New Smart Buoy and Beyond: Tech That’s Changing the Region

      May 5, 2025

      Innovation in Action: Egyptian Patents You Need to Know About

      May 3, 2025

      From Exploring Mars to Building Smart Cities: The UAE’s Most Ambitious Futuristic Projects

      April 28, 2025

      Understanding the Statute for Securities Fraud Violations

      April 26, 2025
    • Thoughts

      Inside Iran’s Jewish Community: A Journey Through Its Historic Synagogues

      June 16, 2025

      Who Are You in Sahel? 7 Personalities You’ll Spot This Summer

      June 15, 2025

      The Types of Guests You’ll Meet at Every Wedding Celebration

      June 13, 2025

      These Indoor Spots in Saudi Bring the Cool Vibes All Summer Long

      June 12, 2025

      Hosting Eid Al-Adha? Here’s How to Serve (Literally and Figuratively)

      June 6, 2025
    Scoop Empire
    You are at:Home»Thoughts»The Arab Compound Utopia: Are We Moving Towards A Residential Bubble?
    Thoughts

    The Arab Compound Utopia: Are We Moving Towards A Residential Bubble?

    Ghalia TamanBy Ghalia TamanSeptember 12, 2022Updated:June 5, 2023No Comments9 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    Driving past any of the major roads and bridges of Egypt’s capital city, Cairo, whether it’s the Ring Road or 6 October Bridge, you may have noticed large colorful billboards advertising what is deemed the ideal secluded life of gated communities, known infamously as compounds or “private cities”. These billboards would usually depict smiling faces of a family surrounded by greenery with English slogans reading “Enter a World of Exclusivity.”

    Via Campaign Middle East

    Just as these billboards are dotting Cairo’s streets, so are the compounds they are advertising with more and more developments popping up every month. It is a trend that continues to grow to this day with more than 500 gated communities marking the outskirts of Cairo alone.

    Compound culture is nothing new in Egypt’s capital, it’s an already existent phenomenon and not just in Egypt but in gulf countries as well. Since the 70s and 80s, Saudi Arabia began opening up gated communities as a way to provide a place for ex-pats and foreigners to live a life that mirrors their own back home. Today more than a third of the people living in Saudi Arabia reside in a compound or gated communities.

    A compound in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia Via Al Basateen Village

    In Egypt, it’s a more recent addition, all starting in the mid-1990s, opening up for a very different reason. With Egypt’s overpopulation, many of its inner-city neighborhoods and districts were becoming overcrowded and noisy as most of the population live in about 7% of Egypt’s land. This led to a shift towards the outskirts of Cairo where mini-cities like New Cairo to the east and 6 October to the west were developed. To many, this shift is considered one that leans towards what is deemed a “better quality” life. Whether it’s New Cairo or 6 October, the main type of residential housing is in fact of gated communities or compounds.

    A typical gated community is “fenced or walled off from its surroundings” with varying levels of security as well as amenities and landscaping depending on the property. They differ in a big way from the characteristics present outside of gated communities. One of the biggest differences is that they have several security gates with some of the larger compounds having as many as nine security gates or sometimes even 20. Within a typical compound, you have certain amenities like pools, a clubhouse, lakes, and lots of green spaces; the bigger compounds would also have supermarkets and even pharmacies.

    That is why, despite the fact that many people head to compounds to avoid the more crowded areas of the inner city, the layout and characteristics of a compound including its being walled off, restrictive in access and homogenous in its people, sort of makes them in a way, a utopic bubble.

    The current narrative behind compound culture is that it is mainly restricted to the upper-class citizens of the Egyptian community. Yet, that is not the case. Speaking with the managing director of a prominent real estate agency, Mostafa Hafez, he explained how with gated communities, there is a range of types and categories.

    On the very extreme end, there are the luxurious gated communities, the most expensive and exclusive types of compounds. With those types of gated communities, there would be the highest standard of security, landscaping, and maintenance services. They would also be quite large, even akin to mini cities with schools, universities, and malls. Hafez also mentioned an added feature that will be implemented in some of these compounds, the QR code. For any visitor to enter the compound, they will need to have a QR code sent to them by a resident to be allowed access to the compound.

    Via Proxy Click

    The next category would be the moderately gated communities. They would mainly consist of apartments and would be partially open to the public, not fully gated. Non-residents can enter the compound to eat at its restaurants or use its supermarket yet they have to enter through gates designated to the public. Such a compound is at a more affordable price range, allowing middle-class citizens to own a house within a gated community. Speaking to a 33-year-old Egyptian HR employee called Ayda Samir, she told us how she wanted to move into a compound in New Cairo but to be able to afford to do so, she had to enter an 8-year plan wherein each year she would have to pay a certain sum of money until the full amount is paid after the 8 year period is over. That is how compounds are becoming more accessible.

    So, if we take a helicopter view of what is occurring on a mass scale, there seems to be a shift towards a new urban identity, with more people flocking to gated communities that represent a new way of life. It is important to also take a more personal, in-depth look at the residents themselves to get a better idea of this dynamic shift in social and urban life and to truly see if people are moving towards a residential bubble.

    Old Vs. New Egypt

    Speaking with an Egyptian 56-year-old mother of two, Maha Adham, she told us how she lived most of her life in Alexandria before moving to Cairo in 2017 so her kids can attend college in New Cairo. She chose a compound because it offered the best quality of life, being surrounded by greenery as well the added peace and quiet.

    Via Maha Adham

    Yet, her childhood in the 70s was starkly different. Raised in a small neighborhood called Roushdy in Alexandria, she lived in a small apartment with her parents and sister. The neighborhood consisted of several small three-story houses unlike the current 10 to 30-story buildings that loom above the city, casting a large shadow over its inhabitants. In that neighborhood, there was a small grocery store, a newsstand as well as a pharmacy.

    Her house in particular was on a small side street and was surrounded by three other houses. To many of the residents of that narrow street, the balcony alone was sort of a central hub for conversations and interaction. In the early morning, Maha, while sipping on a hot cup of tea would gather with her neighbors on the balcony and engage in a fun morning chat.

    View from the balcony of Maha’s childhood home which she visits from time to time. Via Maha Adham

    Sometimes she’d take a walk to the nearby newsstand to get her dad the daily paper. Most of her family was very close by, even walking distance. So every day, she would walk to her cousin’s house so they can hang out. It was a tight-knit family that loved to hold family gatherings every week.

    How the newsstand from Maha’s childhood looks like today Via Maha Adham

    That was all in the past though. Now that she lives in a compound, life has changed drastically. Despite most of her family also moving to Cairo, some even to New Cairo, they barely meet. To meet up, most of them would have to commute a long distance. She does love living in the compound though and enjoys the peace and quiet. Yet, she does feel more isolated than before. She told me that if she had the choice to go back to her neighborhood in Alexandria, back to how it was 30 years ago before it became crowded and noisy, she would go back in a heartbeat. 

    On the other side of the spectrum, there are people who live in what is deemed old Cairo, places like Dokki and Downtown yet they have no intention of moving to a compound. Ahmed Nabil, a 25-year-old, lived his whole in the neighborhood of Dokki. Many days, he would take a stroll next to the Nile corniche or merely sit on its edge and admire the view. 

    Via Ahmed Nabil

    Life there amid its towering buildings and bustling lively streets is sort of an adventure. Residents would exit their apartments to find themselves amidst a booming city with cars honking and zooming past or taxis stopping thinking they want to hitch a ride. They also have access to Egypt’s history, minutes away from where they live like Egypt’s legendary author Naguib Mahfouz’s favorite coffee spot: Cafe Riche. That is why residents in Dokki like Nabil believe compounds represent a secluded environment that has nothing to do with the true spirit of Egypt. 

    Are We Moving Towards A Utopia?

    Today’s current residential trend may be likened to the events of Egypt’s Sci-Fi King, Ahmed Khaled Tawfik’s book ‘Utopia’.

    Via Ishtar House for Culture

    In the story, Tawfik envisions how Egypt might be if we made a time jump to 2023. Bear in mind, the book was originally published in 2008. In his futuristic version of Egypt, he depicts a society that is separated by towering walls. On one side you’ll find the wealthy elite members of the country living a life of luxury and pleasure while on the other side is the rest of the population, suffering from a lack of electricity, sanitation, and medical care. The contrast between the two worlds is quite sharp and bleak.

    Here is a small passage from the book:

    “Utopia, the isolated colony that the rich created on the North Coast… and that now fences in everything they might want. I can show you its landmarks: the giant gates, the electric fence, the security patrols run by SafeCo Inc.”

    Ahmed Khaled Tawfik Via Utopia

    It is of course not an accurate depiction of Egypt’s current state especially because it includes very gory and violent depictions of the rich literally hunting the poor for fun. It is an extremely exaggerated and somber depiction of Egypt merely used for storytelling purposes. Despite this, there are some semblances to today’s current reality such as the appearance of the gated and guarded community with its more luxurious quality of life.

    However, the book does differ from Egypt’s current state in another way. In the book, the utopic city is designated only for the rich and upper-class citizens of Egypt. Yet, Egypt’s current residential makeup which includes gated communities is, as mentioned, not restricted to upper-class citizens and is becoming a norm for middle-class citizens as well. Yet, a very small percentage of the population resides in compounds, almost 5% of the population. That makes us wonder, is there truly a shift towards a residential bubble especially one that is occurring at a snail’s pace? Only time will tell.

    WE SAID THIS: Don’t Miss… Concrete Over Greenery: Maadi Residents Speak Up Against New Highway Plans

    Arab Compounds Residential Bubble utopia
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleEgyptAir Under Fire After Canadian Comedian Maltreatment Video Goes Viral
    Next Article Global Village Is Back At It Again With A New Jam Packed Season
    Ghalia Taman
    • Instagram

    A ginger third culture kid who finally got acclimated to life in Egypt after many years of daily reverse culture shock. Ghalia is a foodie, loves making personalized gifts, and unashamedly buys more books than she reads.

    Related Posts

    Who’s On Stage? July Concerts Lighting Up the Middle East

    June 17, 2025

    Inside Iran’s Jewish Community: A Journey Through Its Historic Synagogues

    June 16, 2025

    Who Are You in Sahel? 7 Personalities You’ll Spot This Summer

    June 15, 2025

    Comments are closed.

    Latest Posts
    • Who’s On Stage? July Concerts Lighting Up the Middle East
    • These 3 Middle Eastern Hotels Recently Won ‘World’s Most Beautiful’ — and It Totally Makes Sense
    • The World’s Most Beautiful Restaurants? These 3 Middle Eastern Spots Just Made the Cut
    • Inside Iran’s Jewish Community: A Journey Through Its Historic Synagogues
    • 5 Private Beaches in Jeddah Worth Escaping To This Summer
    © 2025 Scoop Empire. Made in Cairo with {heart}.
    • About
    • Contact Us
    • Scoop Team
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    X