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Dammam (Arabic: الدَّمَّام ad-Dammām) is the capital of the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia. Situated on the coast of the Arabian Gulf . With a population of 1,386,166 as of 2022, Dammam is the kingdom's fifth-most populous city after Riyadh , Jeddah , Mecca , and Medina .
Greater Dammam is served by the following highways: Route 40 to Riyadh, Makkah, Ta'if and Jeddah. Route 95 to the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, to the south & Jubail and Khafji to the north. Route 605 connecting Khobar, Dammam and the King Fahd International Airport. Route 613 to Qatif, Ra's Tanura, Jubail and Ra's Al Khair. Route 610 Route 615 ...
City Population [1] Comments Abha: 334,290 (2022) Capital city of Asir Ad-Dilam: 39,267 (2022) Al-Abwa: Al Artaweeiyah: Al Bukayriyah: 25,153: Badr: 30,494 (2022 ...
The airport is located 31 kilometres (19 miles) northwest of downtown Dammam and is named after the former King of Saudi Arabia, Fahd ibn Abdulaziz (1921–2005). The airport serves the entire Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia and is one of the four primary international airports in the kingdom.
The Eastern Province's capital city of Dammam has special status. Like the other 12 regional capitals, Dammam is not included within any governorate but is instead simply known as the City of Dammam, in Arabic, the word أمانة (amānah) is used and the city is headed by a mayor (Arabic: أمين; amīn).
Further population growth and economic expansion resulted in the cities of Dammam, Khobar and Dhahran being merged into the Dammam Metropolitan Area. [8] Several major projects to develop the port were initiated in 2013. [9] Dammam port's facilities were expanded as part of Saudi Arabia's Second Five Year Plan (1975–80).
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Damman may refer to: Dammam, the sixth-most populous city in Saudi Arabia; Damman (surname) See also. Daman ...
Arabic: إمارة, romanized: Imārah) or regions/provinces (Arabic: مناطق, romanized: manāṭiq), each governed by a governor or emir (Arabic: أمير, romanized: amīr, lit. 'prince'), [ 1 ] known as the Provincial Governor, to differentiate them from the governors of governorates.