Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Al Rehab (Arabic: مدينة الرحاب pronounced [mæˈdiːnɪt eɾ.ɾeˈħæːb], literal meaning: "City of Spaciousness") is a district of New Cairo and a part of Greater Cairo, in the Cairo Governorate, Egypt. It is a private city built by the Talaat Moustafa Group. Al Rehab is a fully-fledged community, which creates a comprehensive ...
In the year 2000, the Fifth Settlement, along with the nearby First and Third Settlements, were incorporated as New Cairo. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] According to the 2017 census, it had 135,834 residents,: [ 6 ] [ 7 ] while the latest estimate puts it at 145,286 residents in 2023.
New Cairo (Arabic: القاهرة الجديدة el-Qāhera el-Gedīda) is a satellite city within the metropolitan area of Cairo, Egypt. Administratively, it is part of the Eastern Area of Cairo, [ 2 ] administered by the New Urban Communities Authority . [ 3 ]
Breast Cancer Hospital located in the first settlement. A suburb in New Cairo, is affiliated with the National Cancer Institute, Cairo University.The building was allocated by the state in 2010 after an increase in the number of women attending the institute, the process of operating and receiving patients began in 2013 to specialize in "Breast tumors, Radiation therapy and Mammography”.
Madinaty (Arabic: مدينتى Egyptian Arabic pronunciation:, "My City") is an 8000 acre real estate development project, in the New Cairo satellite city, [1] in the Eastern Area of Cairo, Egypt. [ 2 ]
The settlement was established in 1979 by the 504th presidential decree of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat.It is 32 km (20 mi) from the center of Cairo and 17 km (11 mi) from the great pyramids of Giza.
Cairo Festival City is a large-scale real estate development owned by the renowned Futtaim conglomerate, located in the suburb of New Cairo in Egypt. This mixed-use urban community spans approximately 3 million square meters or 700 acres and offers residential , commercial, and leisure facilities.
The Rod El Farag Bridge over the Nile river, which is part of the Tahya Misr Axis crossing the Egyptian capital of Cairo, built by the Egyptian company Arab Contractors, is the world's widest cable-stayed bridge [8] [9] built over the course of 4 years until it was completed in 2019, achieving the Guinness World Record with a width of 67.3 meters.