Dubai is hot and less rainy, the afternoon temperature is as high as 45℃, and the annual rainfall is less than 10 mm. The green shade along the street is covered with plastic hoses like spider webs, and every other segment has a hole the size of a needle, which allows fresh water to flow to the street trees. In this place where water is more expensive than oil, planting a small tree with a thick thumb is said to cost $3,000.
There is a gold market in downtown Dubai. There are more than 350 shops selling gold jewelry on both sides of the street. In the 1950s, a number of gold jewelry processing plants were opened here for the production of gold, but most of the jewelry sold now on the street is imported from Italy, France and Hong Kong. Of course, the styles are still authentic Arabic features.
The only seven-star hotel in the world, the 321-meter-high Bozi Hotel looks like a sail on the Persian Gulf from a distance. Entering the lobby, a few huge gilt pillars support the dome, and two luxurious fountains change the way of spraying water from time to time. It is said that this is the highest atrium of all hotels in the world. The hotel expressly stipulates that tourists who do not spend here are not allowed to visit.
Bo Ci Hotel has more than 200 duplex suites, all furniture, door handles, toilet pipes, and even sticky notes are affixed with gold leaf. Among them, the most luxurious presidential suite is US$20,000 per night. The hotel bought 8 Rolls-Royce cars to pick up passengers at the airport. VIPs in the hotel can also choose to take a helicopter to enter directly from the 28th floor of the hotel apron.