Yesterday a reader sent me photos he took a couple of days ago of the Proud 2 Be Kuwaiti village in Mishref. It seems after the event was over it turned into an abandoned village with no one willing to clean it up. The images of the garbage covered village had already been circulating around social media so I decided to pass by myself this morning and check it out myself.
When I first arrived to the P2BK main gate I quickly recognized the scene from one of the photos I had been sent. Outside the village wall, the area between the P2BK village and the Remal Sand Park area looked like it had been hit by a tornado. There was trash everywhere, overturned stands, painted sculptures lying all over the place and lots of broken gypsum boards. It was a disaster.
Then I proceeded through the main gates into the P2BK village and the scene wasn’t as bad inside. The place is abandoned and it’s outdoor so obviously it’s not going to be in pristine condition.
There was trash lying around mostly in corners or up against the walls but the majority of the space in the village was just empty. It was windy this morning so while walking around there was lots of banging of doors that hadn’t been closed. Lots of doors had fallen off their hinges even but the majority were just flapping with the wind.
Once I was done wandering around the village I decided to head across to the Remal Sand Park area. The Remal Sand Park was the largest sand sculpture park when open and even though the space is abandoned and the park long closed, majority of the sand sculptures are still up and in excellent condition. They definitely didn’t just use sand and water to build these things.
The majority of this space like the village was empty and clean of trash except for one side, where I spotted a bunch of overturned stands and broken gypsum boards strewn across the floor. I have no idea why there is so much broken gypsum boards everywhere, I think that made up the majority of the litter at the park and village.
Generally, both areas weren’t that bad with the biggest issue being the space between the Remal Sand Park and the P2BK village. As I was about to leave in my car I noticed the wind was blowing garbage into this area from one direction. I looked in that direction and noticed two large garbage bins, one was overflowing with garbage, the other empty but there was garbage on the floor all around.
You can also see a trail of garbage from these two bins towards the area between the P2BK and Sand Park. I realized what was happening, whenever there was strong wind, garbage was flying from these bins towards the village where they gathered outside the village walls. I continued driving past those two bins and spotted another large pile of trash in the area behind the sand park.
So is the situation bad? Yes, but just as bad as it is anywhere else in Kuwait. I think what makes this situation different is the name of the event, Proud 2 Be Kuwaiti and here you have the event over and the place looking like a junk yard. Most of it is not their fault, at least garbage wise which seems to fly towards their space from the large dumpsters nearby. But the broken gypsum boards everywhere and overturned stands and decorations, those are their fault. It shouldn’t be difficult to clean up but the question is then what? Well I think I have a solution.
P2BK Village Idea
I think this area should be turned into a paint ball park. It literally looks like a small village which ads realism and it also means lots of hiding places. A round of MILSIM there would be amazing.
Remal Sand Park Idea
Unlike the village, the ground here is just sand so I came up with an idea which I think would work and it’s something we don’t have in Kuwait, a mountain bike park. Mountain bikes are meant for off-road trails which we really don’t have any in Kuwait (maybe just the Mutla Ridges). In the US and in Europe you can find mountain bike parks which are man-made trails with various obstacles to recreate riding your bike on a mountain trail. The picture above is an example of one. There are already some elevations and tunnels in the current sand park, all you would need to do is compound the sand in some areas, add floodlights to make it usable during the evenings, add maybe a few ramps, maybe some wooden boards here and there and you’ll end up with a great looking mountain bike park surrounded by beautiful large sand sculptures.
So thats what I’d like to see happen to the village and sand park. If you have any better ideas just leave them in the comments.
On my way out of the fair grounds I kept spotting white fluffy stuff all over the sidewalks everywhere. At first I thought they were some kind of tacky decorations but on closer inspection I realized they were tissues, papers and white nylon bags that were caught in the weeds that had grown from the sidewalks. If anything I thought that was a bigger issue since its in everyones face on their way in and out of the fair grounds. Depressing.
33 replies on “The State of the P2BK Village Today”
looks like we had another invasion.all this reminds me of what it looked like after 91 gulfwar.
I don’t think the village is a one time event. It’s been recurring for a couple years now. Probably they will fix it and clean it once we get closer to Winter.
Yes they do use it once every year which is why it hasn’t been demolished. My ideas would work during the months they aren’t using the space.
Thanks for sharing
Thats one reason Kuwait should never host a World Cup or the Olympics! Then again… Most abandoned sites usually dont look so good.
whats the purpose in having main sponsors to an event… if they can not see it fully thru with proper demobilization after the event….
Why do they let get the point that it will have to be refurbished again instead of closing it up properly and leaving it in a better state for the next season or does that involve using to many brain cells to plan it out?
Hahahahahahahahhahahahaa
indeed
What’s there to be proud about for being Kuwaiti after this?
I am proud to be Kuwaiti because Kuwaiti society is the most liberal society in the Gulf
Salmiya re-visited?
If you are proud to be Kuwaiti then only something sustainable is worth doing. Something that not only sustains itself year round, but grows, and provides for the people. Temporary flashes in the pan are simply fake and wasteful. Garbage/rubbish is the perceived problem, and it has already been proven by Mike Reynolds that garbage/rubbish is actually the solution and can bring you real freedom. If you haven’t already, watch the documentary Garbage Warrior, it is about Earthships. We are planning to build one/some so anyone who can or wants to help let Mark know and he can get in touch with me. Ideally we need land, sponsors and man/woman power.
Garbage Warrior https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UNYFlcV9R1w&feature=kp
..and Mark can still have his mountain bike park next to the earthships!
yeah
Proud to be Kuwaiti bro… really proud
Trash everywhere. who to blame? Baladiya for not cleaning? or people for trashing? Both?
People tend to go on autopilot for day to day chores, errands, and activities. The fact that they are on autopilot makes them not realize the trash because they just got accustomed to seeing it and becomes a normal sight in the back of their head.
If everyone took a moment before entering their house or workplace and saw the trash everywhere and it actually gets registered in their brain that this is not a normal sight, they will do something about it.
First and foremost, if its a “recurrent event” and its a “fixed venue” then its the responsibility of the organizer! AND NO ONE ELSE. Its actually very shameful and amateur for the organizer to be publicizing this and searching for someone to blame! everyone should ask: what post event measures did they put in place to secure their investment and ensure the quality is sustained until the next event? while looking at the amount of rubble piling up its obvious that there has been no monitoring for quite sometime.
They score a 100% for the efforts, but they don’t score on business acumen oddly for an event catered for encouraging businesses, notably SMEs! what an example to lead with…..
Even at the height of P2BK and Rimal Village’s popularity, the area leading up to them was a filthy disaster
I wish the entire Mishref Fair area would be demolished and rebuilt as something like this https://www.adnec.ae/
Here are more pics:
https://www.adnec.ae/adnec/venue-information/photo-gallery/adnec-campus
its not about the place, its about the people working in it and how it is managed!
I got sent this message on whatsapp awhile ago.
The Japanese attitude towards work
If no one can do it, I can do it.
If no one can do it, I must do it.
The Arab attitude towards work
Wallahi if one can do it, let him do it.
If no one can do it, ya habibi how can I do it?
Which brings to mind the image that was trending awhile ago; the Japanese fans at the World Cup cleaning up after themselves.
I bet you if there was a really hefty fine for littering, Kuwait would look a lot prettier.
It has nothing to do with the fine in Japan, it’s all upbringing.
i do agree with your example, but to avoid being general in this particular case, the fault really are the organizers for all the reasons i mentioned before. they obviously lack the a sound process bit for running such level event. they focused so much on hosting the event and missed the managing bit of it.
Maybe deera app could help
Typical Kuwaitis.
Please inform the deera people asap!!!!!!
So much for P2BK!!!!
I’m Moe Tarakomyi, lighting designer of Remal Sand Park. I was there since the beginning of the construction. They were using clean sand and water to make the sculptures, but as soon as they were done with any small part, it was sprayed with a solution of water and something like wood glow. And for many weeks, they used big pomps to spray that on everything on a daily basis. I’ve been told by one of the artists that sculptures can stand for at least a year or two, but they need minor maintenance after every storm or heavy rain.
disgusting!
I know the guy who runs this event. Perhaps I should send him this link and see his reply.
Call upon the P2BK Organizers and lets see what they have to say!
Well the young (Hawameer) have collected their booth rental profits, and that’s all that really matters.
9al 3al nibbee hathee ilKuwait. =)