Yesterday I passed by Youm Al-Bahhar which officially reopened on Sunday after getting refurbished.
I’ve been visiting Youm Al-Bahhar since I was a kid in the 80s so I’m very familiar with the place and tend to visit it every few years for nostalgic purposes but also because of the bookshop there which I first visited back in 2014. The bookshop called the Kuwait Heritage Library mostly sells old books many of which are rare, so I like to pass by the guy every so often to see if he got anything new.
The Youm Al-Bahhar village has changed a lot since it first opened. Initially, it resembled an old fisherman’s village built on sand next to the sea and was filled with different old-school entertainment rides for the kids (the photo above of me and my brother is the only one I could find showing it). Over the years the village kept getting more modernized and eventually the children’s games were removed.
If you visited the village over the last few years then you’re not going to see much of a difference in terms of the main structure. It’s been cleaned up, and given a fresh new paint job but the layout is still basically the same. The village has a few shops that sell different things related to Kuwait, there is now a small museum, a rooftop cafe which was closed when I passed by, and an area filled with benches and surrounded by a few shops that sell various traditional food like tea and rugag bread.
The village opens from 11AM to 10PM but the various shops open from 4PM onwards. Entry is free and the village is located across from the National Assembly building (Google Maps).
6 replies on “Visiting the Revamped Youm Al-Bahhar”
I get your nostalgic connection (look so happy in that pic). I wish they kept it that way. Kids need things like this today. Now it’s a pretty weird place that’s somewhere between Mubarkiya and Sadu House but not neither and pretty unnecessary. Make Mubarkiya Great Again.
Make Anything Great Again is whats needed on a global level
They should bring back the rides and kids games to encourage a family atmosphere instead of odd people loitering around
What do you mean by odd people?
“….the village is located across from the National Assembly building.”
Please put a pic of the main entrance and Google maps location.
it’s not difficult to search for youm al bahhar on google maps but here it is https://goo.gl/maps/bFLxWnJH5KjTW7Er7