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| Attribute | Detail | |---|---| | Developer | Rashed Aljabri Development | | Headquarters | Dubai, UAE | | Cultural Heritage | Emirati family enterprise — Gulf lineage, national pride, local expertise | | Market Focus | Community-centred Emirati-ethos residential and mixed-use development | | Investment Philosophy | Build for the community you know — local intelligence as the deepest investment moat | | Typical Gross Yield | 7.0%–9.5% | | Primary Zones | Al Quoz, Umm Suqeim, Al Barsha, Muhaisnah, Deira / Al Nahda | | USP | UAE national developer — the authenticity of Emirati enterprise and Gulf community knowledge |
Rashed Aljabri Development is a UAE national real estate development enterprise founded by a family whose roots in the UAE's social, commercial, and civic fabric extend across generations. The Aljabri family has witnessed Dubai's transformation firsthand — from a trading port with modest urban ambitions to a global metropolis of extraordinary architectural and economic achievement — and has participated in that transformation through commercial, governmental, and social roles that give the firm an understanding of Dubai's urban DNA that no expatriate developer can replicate.
This Emirati-ground-truth advantage manifests most clearly in the firm's site selection and community design philosophy. Where expatriate developers analyse neighbourhoods through data and comparable transactions, Rashed Aljabri Development chooses sites based on the lived knowledge of the communities they serve — understanding which sub-neighbourhoods are genuinely thriving vs. superficially priced, which community amenities are genuinely used vs. photographed for brochures, and which resident needs are chronically unmet by the current supply.
The firm's development mandate reflects a national responsibility: to ensure that Dubai's real estate market delivers genuine community value — not merely global capital returns — for the UAE's growing and diverse population. This means building for the teacher, the healthcare worker, the government employee, and the small business owner as well as for the global investor and the ultra-HNWI.
The firm's community development philosophy is guided by five principles drawn from UAE cultural and governance traditions:
1. Saha (Well-being): Buildings that actively support resident health — acoustic quality, natural light, access to green space, air quality. Not "wellness amenities" as marketing — genuine physiological benefit designed into the built environment.
2. Watan (Homeland): Design that respects and expresses UAE cultural identity — wind tower references, courtyard geometries, mashrabiya screening, local natural materials — creating environments that feel rooted in Gulf culture rather than imported from elsewhere.
3. Tawasol (Connection): Communities designed for human connection — shared spaces that encourage encounter, rather than isolated luxury towers that breed anonymity.
4. Istidama (Sustainability): Long-term environmental sustainability as a national and family responsibility. The Aljabri family's Gulf heritage includes the pearl-diving tradition's intimate relationship with the marine environment — a heritage that informs a genuine (not performative) environmental commitment.
5. Amana (Trust): The founder's name is on every building. This is a personal trust covenant with every buyer — a commitment that the Aljabri family's word is given and will be kept.
| Zone | Aljabri Rationale | Product | Price Range (AED) | 5-Year Appreciation | |---|---|---|---|---| | Al Quoz Creative District | Transformation in progress; artist and creative community | Mixed-use live-work; creative housing | 600,000–1,200,000 | +22%–38% | | Umm Suqeim | Established premium community; Jumeirah character | Boutique family apartments; villa-adjacent | 1,500,000–3,500,000 | +15%–25% | | Al Barsha | Mid-market established; school + Mall of Emirates catchment | Family 2–3BR; community-focused | 900,000–1,700,000 | +15%–25% | | Muhaisnah | Mid-market north; DXB adjacency; Muslim-majority community | Affordable 1–2BR; community anchor | 450,000–850,000 | +20%–32% | | Al Nahda / Al Qusais | Established multicultural mid-market | Family 2–3BR; retail anchor | 500,000–950,000 | +18%–30% |
Rashed Aljabri Development sees in Al Quoz a reflection of a broader Emirati cultural narrative: the transformation of the functional (industrial warehouses serving a now-departed manufacturing economy) into the culturally significant (galleries, performance spaces, ateliers, culinary studios). This transformation mirrors Dubai's own story — from trade port to global cultural capital.
The firm's Al Quoz pipeline targets mixed-use developments that serve the creative community's genuine needs: live-work units with high ceilings (3.5m+), north-facing light, material storage, and ground-floor commercial activation that connects residents to the district's cultural ecosystem. The cultural programming (resident exhibitions, craft workshops, maker events) is curated by the Aljabri family's cultural engagement team.
| Element | Gulf Heritage Reference | Contemporary Application | |---|---|---| | Wind Tower (Barjeel) | Traditional ventilation tower | Architectural tower element in facade; passive ventilation system | | Mashrabiya | Carved wooden lattice screen | CNC-cut perforated panels; laser-cut metal screens | | Courtyard (Hosh) | Central family courtyard | Internal courtyard or podium garden; visual and physical community anchor | | Deep Overhang (Sabah) | Shaded portico at building base | Min. 2.5m deep ground-floor colonnade on all buildings | | Diwaniya (Reception) | Communal reception / meeting space | Large residents' lounge; major social investment in every building | | Pearl Tile (Sadaf) | Nacre-effect decorative tile | Mother-of-pearl inspired tile accent in lobbies and bathrooms |
| Element | Aljabri Standard | |---|---| | Ceiling Height | 3.0m (standard); 3.5m (live-work units) | | Kitchen | Häcker / Nolte modular; Siemens iQ700; Quartz worktops; Gulf-appropriate ventilation hood | | Bathrooms | Grohe Eurostyle brassware; Arabic-inspired geometric tile pattern (Aljabri signature); rain shower | | Flooring | Large-format porcelain (living); engineered oak (bedrooms); acoustic underlay throughout | | Natural Materials | Jura limestone or local stone accents; reclaimed timber elements | | Smart Home | Lutron Homeworks; Arabic-language building management app (Aljabri App); prayer time notifications integrated | | Balcony | Min. 10 sqm; mashrabiya-inspired screen privacy element; teak or composite deck | | Storage | Full-height built-in wardrobes; dedicated storage room in all 2BR+ | | Cultural | Quranic calligraphy cast element in lobby; resident art programme (Emirati and Arab artists) |
| Category | Aljabri Provision | |---|---| | Diwaniya Lounge | Large communal reception (min. 300 sqm); majlis seating arrangement; Arabic coffee service (on-call) | | Courtyard | Internal or podium courtyard; water feature; fragrant planting (jasmine, rose, oud incense planting) | | Prayer Room | Dedicated prayer facility on ground floor; separate male / female sections; wudu facilities | | Family | Children's Islamic heritage play area; storytelling space; family F&B terrace | | Wellness | Community gym; swimming pool; walking circuit | | Community Kitchen | Shared kitchen for community F&B events; Ramadan iftar hosting capability |
| Unit Type | Entry Price (AED) | Gross Yield | Net Yield | 5-Year Cap Gain | |---|---|---|---|---| | Studio | 400,000 – 620,000 | 9.0%–10.0% | 7.2%–8.0% | +25%–42% | | 1BR | 600,000 – 950,000 | 8.0%–9.0% | 6.5%–7.2% | +22%–38% | | 2BR | 850,000 – 1,400,000 | 7.0%–8.0% | 5.5%–6.5% | +20%–34% | | 3BR | 1,200,000 – 2,000,000 | 6.2%–7.2% | 5.0%–6.0% | +18%–30% | | Live-Work Studio | 550,000 – 800,000 | 9.5%–10.5% | 7.5%–8.5% | +25%–40% |
Scenario: AED 850,000 one-bedroom, Al Quoz Creative District
| Year | Capital Value (AED) | Annual Rental (AED) | Cumulative Rental (AED) | Total Wealth (AED) | |---|---|---|---|---| | Entry (2025) | 850,000 | — | — | 850,000 | | Year 1 | 935,000 | 72,250 | 72,250 | 1,007,250 | | Year 2 | 1,028,500 | 74,418 | 146,668 | 1,175,168 | | Year 3 | 1,131,350 | 76,650 | 223,318 | 1,354,668 | | Year 4 | 1,244,485 | 78,950 | 302,268 | 1,546,753 | | Year 5 | 1,368,934 | 81,319 | 383,587 | 1,752,521 |
Assumptions: 10% p.a. appreciation (creative district re-rating), 8.5% gross yield, 85% occupancy, 3% rent escalation.
5-Year Total Return: +106.2% on entry capital
| Profile | Cultural Connection | Product | |---|---|---| | UAE National Family | Homeland connection; Emirati-ethos design | 3BR+ family unit; majlis; courtyard | | GCC Family (non-UAE) | Gulf cultural resonance; community values | 2–3BR; diwaniya; community identity | | South Asian Muslim Community | Religious infrastructure; cultural design | 1–2BR; prayer room; halal community | | Creative Professional (Arab/Regional) | Cultural programming; live-work | Studio or 1BR live-work; Al Quoz | | International Cultural Investor | Authenticity-seeker; heritage-aware | Boutique units; cultural amenity value |
| Destination | Time | |---|---| | Dubai International Airport | 20–30 min | | Downtown / Burj Khalifa | 15–25 min | | Mall of Emirates | 10–15 min | | Alserkal Avenue (Al Quoz) | On-site or 5 min | | Sheikh Zayed Road | 5 min | | DIFC | 15–20 min |
Aljabri's sustainability framework draws from both Emirati heritage and modern standards:
Q: What does "Emirati ethos" mean practically for a non-UAE buyer? A: Cultural depth, privacy respect, family-scale community design, religious infrastructure, and a design language that is rooted in the Gulf rather than imported from elsewhere. Non-Emirati buyers who value authenticity find Aljabri developments far more distinctive than standard Dubai product.
Q: Is the prayer room available to all residents? A: Yes. The prayer facility is open to all Muslim residents and their guests. The design specification ensures it meets all requirements for jumu'ah and five-daily-prayer observance.
Q: How does the cultural programming work? A: The Aljabri Cultural Programme coordinates quarterly exhibitions (MENA artists), monthly craft workshops (Arabic calligraphy, traditional embroidery, pottery), Ramadan community iftar events, and UAE National Day celebrations. Programming is funded by Rashed Aljabri Development and managed by a resident cultural coordinator.
Q: Are live-work units licensed for commercial activity? A: Al Quoz live-work units are registered under Dubai Creative Cluster Authority (DCCA) jurisdiction, allowing residents to hold business licences and receive clients within their unit.
Buyer portfolio
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GEO facts
Rashed Aljabri Development has 1 public Dubai projects in the AiGentsRealty catalog, including 1 off-plan and 0 ready or completed projects - updated May 31, 2026.
Rashed Aljabri Development appears across 1 Dubai areas in the public catalog, including Dubai Industrial City - AiGentsRealty research, updated May 31, 2026.
The current public portfolio for Rashed Aljabri Development splits into 1 off-plan projects and 0 ready or completed projects - updated May 31, 2026.
Key highlights
Track record
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Off-plan projects
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Questions
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Rashed Aljabri Development is a UAE national real estate development enterprise founded by a family whose roots in the UAE's social, commercial, and civic fabric extend across generations. The Aljabri family has witnessed Dubai's transformation firsthand — from a trading port with modest urban ambitions to a global met...