Generated by GPT-5-mini| Dubai Expo 2020 Bureau | |
|---|---|
| Name | Dubai Expo 2020 Bureau |
| Formation | 2013 |
| Type | Intergovernmental organisation |
| Headquarters | Dubai World Central |
| Location | Dubai, United Arab Emirates |
| Leader title | Director General |
| Leader name | Reem Al Hashimy |
| Parent organization | Government of Dubai |
Dubai Expo 2020 Bureau The Dubai Expo 2020 Bureau was the organizing authority established to plan, coordinate, and deliver the World Expo hosted in Dubai, linking United Arab Emirates initiatives with World Expo mechanisms and collaborating with national, regional, and international stakeholders to stage the universal exposition at Expo 2020 Dubai.
The bureau was created amid diplomatic, commercial, and cultural negotiations involving actors such as Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed Al Maktoum, and the United Arab Emirates Ministry of Foreign Affairs following Dubai's successful bid to host the exposition, which competed with bids from Yekaterinburg, Izmir, and São Paulo in a process overseen by the Bureau International des Expositions, itself part of the United Nations system; the establishment referenced precedents including organising bodies from Expo 2010 Shanghai and Expo 2015 Milan and took cues from event frameworks used by Olympic Games organising committees and FIFA World Cup host associations.
The bureau's governance model combined executive leadership, advisory councils, and technical departments, integrating figures and entities such as the Dubai Executive Council, the office of Reem Al Hashimy, the Dubai Electricity and Water Authority, and commercial partners like DP World and Emaar Properties alongside cultural institutions such as the Dubai Culture authority and the Smithsonian Institution for programming advice; oversight involved liaison with diplomatic missions including the United States Embassy in Abu Dhabi, the British Embassy Abu Dhabi, and national pavilion stakeholders drawn from Japan, France, India, Germany, and Brazil as well as participation from intergovernmental organizations like the World Health Organization and the International Labour Organization.
The bureau coordinated site development, international participation, and thematic curation, managing relationships with national pavilions from countries like United Kingdom, China, Italy, South Korea, and Canada while aligning sustainability targets with standards set by organizations including the International Renewable Energy Agency and the Green Building Council; responsibilities extended to security partnerships involving Interpol, Gulf Cooperation Council agencies, and local law enforcement, visitor services in collaboration with Emirates (airline), Dubai Airports, and transport entities such as Roads and Transport Authority (Dubai), and legacy planning with stakeholders like Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Global Initiatives and the Dubai Future Foundation.
Operational execution encompassed master planning, construction, and programming processes engaging developers such as Arabtec, consultants from Arup (company), architects influenced by practices used in Zaha Hadid Architects projects, and exhibitions drawing on curatorial networks including the Louvre Abu Dhabi and the Victoria and Albert Museum; logistical coordination required integration with energy suppliers like Masdar, water and waste partners including Veolia, transport scheduling with Etihad Rail, and visitor experience management influenced by precedents from EXPO 2000 Hannover and Expo 2012 Yeosu, coordinated through digital platforms and ticketing partnerships with tech firms comparable to SAP SE and Microsoft.
The bureau's legacy planning emphasized post-expo reuse of infrastructure for initiatives linked to Dubai South, Al Wasl Plaza conservation, and tenanting strategies involving educational and cultural users such as American University of Sharjah, New York University Abu Dhabi, and commercial tenants aligned with Dubai International Financial Centre ambitions; the event influenced regional tourism strategies alongside effects observed in prior host cities like Barcelona after Expo 1888 Barcelona and economic assessments paralleling analyses of Expo 2010 Shanghai and Expo 2015 Milan, while also contributing to discourse on urban development promoted by entities including the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and academic partners at institutions such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology and University College London.
Category:Organisations based in Dubai Category:World's fair organizers