From rising theft incidents in Downtown Cairo to improved response times across Giza districts, this week brought mixed results for the capital's public safety landscape.
Understanding the infrastructure overhaul reshaping the capital requires looking back at the congestion, population pressures and false starts that forced the government's hand.
As pressure mounts to address overcrowding in historic neighbourhoods, officials and urban planners diverge sharply on whether demolition or gradual upgrade strategies will serve residents.
As renovation deadlines loom across central Cairo's most densely populated neighbourhoods, residents and officials face critical decisions about relocation, compensation, and the future of historic districts.
A revised metropolitan mobility strategy aims to ease gridlock on Ring Road and improve bus networks across working-class neighbourhoods, but residents warn implementation remains the real test.
The capital's environmental sector saw significant momentum this week, with new recycling programmes launching and public transport upgrades moving closer to reality.
With enrollment pressures mounting and infrastructure demands intensifying, Egypt's capital institutions must make decisive choices on expansion, fees, and digital transformation before September.
Government and urban planners debate solutions as Cairo's housing shortage worsens. Explore competing strategies for affordable housing and New Capital relocation.
Cairo Metro Line 4 reaches Ain Shams and Helwan by 2027, cutting commute times from 2 hours to 35 minutes for 3.2 million residents across underserved neighborhoods.
As garbage collection failures plague Cairo's affluent island neighbourhood, residents speak out about health risks, property values, and their demands for accountability.
A decade of shifting priorities, budget crises, and neighbourhood displacement has transformed a transport ambition into a test of governance—here's the long road that led us here.
As crime and safety concerns mount across the Middle East, Egypt's capital is testing new policing models that show promise—yet experts say modernisation remains critical.
This week brought fresh momentum to Cairo's environmental agenda, with new recycling initiatives and urban renewal projects reshaping daily life across the capital.
Education authorities announce sweeping revisions to secondary mathematics and science programmes, affecting thousands of students across Greater Cairo.
The capital's crime and safety crisis didn't emerge overnight—it's the result of chronic underfunding, fragmented coordination, and a growing gap between rapid urban expansion and police capacity.
Behind Cairo's ambitious environmental initiatives lies a complex picture of progress, challenges, and hard metrics that paint a revealing portrait of the city's sustainability trajectory.
As the New Administrative Capital's monorail nears completion and metro expansion accelerates, hard data reveals the scale of Cairo's infrastructure challenge.
As universities along the Nile adopt hybrid learning and neighbourhood schools modernise curricula, Cairo charts its own course between tradition and innovation—with mixed results compared to London, Dubai, and São Paulo.