Kempinski Mall Of The Emirates
When you book Kempinski Mall Of The Emirates in Dubai, UAE through our Virtuoso partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a $100 hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Upgrade on arrival, subject to availability
- Daily Buffet breakfast for up to two guests per bedroom, served in the restaurant
- $100 USD equivalent Resort or Hotel credit to be utilized during stay (Not combinable, not valid on room rate, no cash value if not redeemed in full)
- Early check-in / Late check-out, subject to availability
Location
Al Quoz Industrial 3 positions you in one of Dubai's most intriguing contrasts: a neighbourhood where contemporary art galleries occupy converted warehouses and luxury retail sits alongside light manufacturing districts. The property connects directly to Mall of the Emirates, one of the city's landmark shopping destinations, home to Ski Dubai's indoor slopes and over 600 retail concepts. Step outside and you're in a rapidly evolving pocket of the city where design studios, exhibition spaces, and creative businesses have claimed former industrial zones, transforming them into Dubai's unofficial arts quarter.
The location offers quick access to the city's defining coastline. Al Sufouh Beach stretches three kilometres north, sand curving along the Arabian Gulf with views toward the Burj Al Arab's sail-shaped silhouette. Jumeirah Public Beach and Kite Beach follow the shore eastward, the latter drawing kiteboarders and beachside dining. Seven kilometres south, Palm Jumeirah's crescent redefines the shoreline entirely, an engineered archipelago visible from space.
Dubai International Airport sits 23 kilometres northeast, roughly 25 minutes by taxi depending on Sheikh Zayed Road traffic. Al Maktoum International Airport, 25 kilometres southwest, serves as an alternate gateway, though most international arrivals favour DXB's frequent connections and metro link to the city.
XU Dubai brings Cantonese cuisine to the property's second floor, where the kitchen respects traditional wok technique while taking a modern stance on presentation and sourcing. The menu moves through dim sum, roasted meats, and live seafood tanks, built around quality ingredients and precision rather than fusion impulse. Five kilometres northwest, Trèsind Studio holds three Michelin stars for its surprise tasting menu, a journey through regional Indian flavours executed with technical exactness. The chefs draw from all corners of the subcontinent, reinterpreting spice, texture, and tradition without losing their roots. Book well ahead; seating is intimate and demand unrelenting.
Golf stretches across multiple championship courses within five kilometres: the Majlis Course at Emirates Golf Club has hosted the Dubai Desert Classic since 1989, its greens framed by desert and skyline. The Faldo Course offers a contrasting layout, technical and water-lined. For marine exploration, Seven Seas Boats Rental operates from a marina two kilometres east, offering access to the Gulf's calm waters. Kite Beach, five kilometres along the coast, draws a different crowd entirely: kiteboarders carving through the shallows, beach volleyball nets in the sand, and food trucks serving açaí bowls alongside shawarma.
November through March delivers Dubai's peak season. Mornings start cool, around 15 to 20°C, warming to the mid-20s by afternoon. Light returns at a lower angle, softening the usual desert glare. Beaches fill with European escapees, terraces stay open late, and the city exhales after summer's stillness.
April and October bookend the extremes: still warm but manageable, temperatures hovering in the low to mid-30s. Outdoor activities shift to early morning or late evening. The city moves faster during these shoulder months, less crowded than winter but not yet subdued by heat.
June through September brings temperatures above 40°C, the air conditioning cranked everywhere. This is indoor Dubai: malls, restaurants, galleries. The streets empty midday, life migrating to climate-controlled spaces until sunset offers brief reprieve. Rain remains a rare event; when it arrives, it's brief and startling, slicking the roads and filling the air with petrichor.
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