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Red Sea 2030 Vision - everything you need to know about Saudi Arabia’s most ambitious tourism project

  • Writer: Daire Brady
    Daire Brady
  • Jan 2
  • 2 min read
Red Sea 2030 Vision

Saudi Arabia’s Red Sea 2030 Vision outlines one of the world’s most ambitious tourism projects, featuring 50 luxury resorts, over 8,000 hotel rooms, and 1,000+ residential properties powered entirely by renewable energy. The destination aims to set a global benchmark for sustainable luxury, one that restores more than it consumes.



The Scale: A Destination of Unmatched Diversity


Stretching across 28,000 square kilometers on the western coast, the Red Sea destination spans 90+ islands surrounded by untouched coral reefs, deserts, mountains, and dormant volcanoes. It’s a rare landscape blending dramatic natural beauty with ecological significance.



The Design Framework: Built for the Future


The project’s design pillars center on regenerative luxury, sustainable infrastructure, and smart mobility, ranging from solar and wind power to electric seaplanes and hydrogen-powered boats. Architectural plans draw deeply from Saudi culture, ensuring modernity is balanced with heritage.



The National Context: A Cornerstone of Vision 2030


The Red Sea Project is a flagship initiative under Saudi Vision 2030, the country’s strategic plan to diversify its economy beyond oil. By positioning Saudi Arabia as a global luxury destination, it aims to redefine how travelers engage with nature, culture, and sustainability.



The Impact: A Blueprint for Sustainable Tourism


With 75% of its total area preserved for nature, fully renewable energy systems, and more than 70,000 jobs created, the Red Sea destination is shaping a new model for eco-aligned tourism. Billions in sustainable tourism revenue are projected, showcasing how hospitality and ecology can thrive together.


The Red Sea 2030 Vision is more than a tourism project - it’s a blueprint for how luxury, ecology, and cultural identity can converge to redefine the future of global hospitality. It shows what’s possible when regeneration becomes the foundation, not the afterthought.


What do you think? Will the Red Sea set a new global standard for sustainable luxury? Let us know in the comments!


All images sourced from LinkedIn. Used here for editorial purposes only.


 
 
 

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