Contact Us

Qatar to house some World Cup fans in 'traditional tents'

Published June 15,2022
Subscribe

Qatar hopes to house some of the 1.2 million fans expected to attend the FIFA World Cup later this year in 1,000 "traditional tents", organisers said on Tuesday.

"This is one of the options that will go live in the next two weeks," said Omar al-Jaber, an official responsible for accommodation at the supreme committee organising the tournament.

"It is real camping," he said during a press briefing. "We need to give people the experience of a desert and tent in normal Bedouin style."

The tents will be supplied with water, electricity and drainage systems, but no air conditioning in the country known for extreme summer heat but moderate winters.

Held from November 21 to December 18, the World Cup will be the first staged during the northern winter to avoid summer temperatures that at times surpass 45 degrees Celsius (113 Fahrenheit).

Another luxury camp with 200 tents is also planned for football fans visiting the gas-rich Gulf country.

They will be set up along a beach called the Sealine in the country's south, on the edge of the desert, with other areas also to be announced, Jaber said.

He added that "more than 100,000 rooms" will be available at the time of the tournament, seeking to allay concerns over accommodation capacity in the tiny emirate.

Fans will be able to choose between taking up residence in specially designated villages, as well as apartments, villas, cabins and two cruise ships.

A large portion of the country's hotel rooms have already been pre-booked by organisers for the teams, referees and the press, but FIFA will release any unused rooms, Jaber said.

He added that there are more hotels under construction, vowing that more rooms would become available in the coming months.

A peak in bookings is expected on November 25-27, to coincide with the midpoint of the group stage, but "it does not mean that we don't have rooms on those days", he said.

More than 160 round-trip flights are scheduled daily from neighbouring Gulf countries to allow them to accommodate supporters.