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Doha Corniche

كورنيش الدوحة

Seven-kilometre promenade with skyline views and parks by the sea.

The Doha Corniche is the city’s defining waterfront and a symbol of modern Qatar. Stretching for nearly seven kilometers along the curving edge of Doha Bay, it links the historic core of the city with the Al Dafna business district, uniting old and new Doha in one continuous urban landscape.

Built on reclaimed land since the late 1960s, the Corniche was Qatar’s first major modernization project, showcasing the nation’s transformation through its architecture, parks, museums, and monuments.

Today, the Corniche serves as Doha’s main promenade for walking, recreation, and celebration — the site of National Day parades, sports festivals, and public gatherings, framed by the skyline and the shimmering waters of the bay.

How to Get There

🚶

On foot from Doha center ~26-39 min.

✈️

From DOH airport (Doha) by taxi/transfer ~14 min.

Description

What it is

The Doha Corniche is a seven-kilometer waterfront promenade and dual carriageway curving along Doha Bay. It is Qatar’s central civic space, hosting national parades, sports and cultural events, while linking the modern Al Dafna business district with the historic quarters of old Doha.

Key features

  • Length ~7 km – a continuous pedestrian spine and roadway along the bay’s crescent.
  • Built via land reclamation since the late 1960s – a defining image of Doha’s modernization.
  • Connects Al Dafna to old Doha – the city’s primary axis between high-rises and heritage districts.
  • Access: underpasses, peripheral parking and proximity to metro – 7 of 37 stations lie near the Corniche.
  • Urban stage: venue for National Day, National Sports Day and major fan zones, with recurring public-art installations.

What to see

  • The promenade and parks – Al Bidda, Al Dafna (Sheraton Park), MIA Park, beaches and dhow piers.
  • Flagship museums on the waterfront – Museum of Islamic Art and National Museum of Qatar.
  • Public art – Pearl Monument, Richard Serra’s 7, the Calligraphy Statue, Orry the Oryx, and the Dugong Sculpture.

History

In 1969, land reclamation and government projects began along the bay; through the 1970s, amid independence and the oil boom, the Corniche became Doha’s showcase. Planning was led by the Amiri Diwan’s Urban Planning Office under Hisham Qaddumi, shaping a boulevard with roundabouts and civic nodes.

In 1982, the Sheraton Grand Doha opened, anchoring the Corniche’s northern end and catalyzing the Al Dafna CBD. Throughout the 1980s, ministry complexes and the Central Post Office reinforced the waterfront’s role as a state façade.

In 2008, the Museum of Islamic Art opened on its own island off the Corniche, followed in 2019 by the National Museum of Qatar at the southern tip. Since 2017, upgrades have added tunnels, cycling routes, four public-art venues and extensive World Cup–ready landscaping.

Practical information

Location: along Doha Bay from the Sheraton in Al Dafna south to Al Khulaifat and Doha Port.
Getting there: metro – Corniche, West Bay, DECC, National Museum and others; by car/taxi with parking at parks and beaches.
Access: open 24/7 and free; individual parks, beaches and piers run on set hours.
Visiting hours: best light and activity at sunrise and evening; check city calendar for events.
Visit duration: 1.5–3 hours for a stroll; 4–6 hours with museums.
Best time: November–March; in summer, after sunset.
Special notes: long sun-exposed stretches; underpasses help cross traffic; expect closures during major festivities.