It appears that Neom—Saudi Arabia’s hugely expensive, architecturally bizarre urban development project—is floundering and close to collapse. A new report from the Financial Times cites high-level sources within the project to paint a picture of dysfunction and failure at the heart of the quixotic effort.
Neom was envisioned as a vast series of fantastical urban developments spread across the coast of the Red Sea. At the center of the project is The Line—a proposed 105-mile-long city which developers had initially projected could house as many as 9 million people by the year 2030. The Line is defined by bizarre architectural flourishes that, as the story notes, have seemed impossible even to the execs tasked with making them a reality.


I think SAs wild architecture ideas are cool and fun but it’s the blood money, slavery, and human rights violations that bother me.
They’re also wildly terrible. The only reason any of them get built is because the government throws huge amounts of money at it and doesn’t care about the feasibility or impact.
Those are very much vanity projects, as Saudi royalty are on a epeen contest versus other Gulf emirates.