Living at Manchester City
Manchester City Yas Residences by Ohana is the kind of project that feels easy to explain once you picture the setting. It sits on Yas Island in Abu Dhabi, right by the water, and it is built around a simple idea, people want homes that come with a lifestyle already baked in. Here, the “branded” part is not just a name on a brochure. The whole community leans into sport, wellbeing, and the everyday energy that comes with living in one of the UAE’s most active leisure districts. The first thing that stands out is how the development is planned. It is not presented as a single tower with a few facilities tucked at the bottom. It is a full waterfront community spread across a large site, with a central canal feel, green corridors, and wide open spaces that make the place look and breathe differently. The architecture is described as modern Mediterranean, which translates into clean shapes, warm proportions, shaded outdoor areas, and plenty of glazing to pull in daylight. It is polished, but it still feels liveable. Home options are broad, which is part of the appeal. There are apartments for people who want a neat, well located base on Yas Island, and there are larger formats for families who want more space without giving up the island lifestyle. The mix includes studios and one to three bedroom apartments, then it moves into townhouses, twin villas, and four and five bedroom villas. There is also a limited maisonette cluster, which is the type of detail buyers tend to remember because it signals scarcity within a larger master plan. In terms of scale, the numbers give a sense of what is being delivered. The master plan is positioned at around 170 hectares, with close to 1,700 villas and townhouses plus 654 apartments across six mid rise buildings. Those mid rises are not overly tall, which helps the community feel more relaxed and less like a dense urban cluster. Apartments are marketed from around AED 2,000,000, and the payment plans you see mentioned most often include 50/50 structures. Handover is aligned with 2028, which fits the wider market cycle for major island developments. What also matters is that it is not just residential. The plan speaks to retail, hotel plots, and core services like a medical centre and a mosque, which means the place is designed to function as a real neighbourhood. That is a big deal for long term owners, because convenience is what keeps a community feeling effortless once the initial excitement wears off. When you put all of that together, Manchester City Yas Residences by Ohana reads as a branded waterfront address that is built to hold attention, not just at launch, but years into ownership. Waterfront Living and Sports Inspired Amenities on Yas Island The amenities are where the Manchester City Yas Residences story starts to feel different from other waterfront communities. A lot of projects promise “lifestyle”, but here the lifestyle angle has a clear theme, sport, performance, and recovery, with social spaces built around that. For residents, this is less about having a gym in the building and more about having a routine that is easy to stick to because the environment supports it. There is a strong emphasis on football inspired facilities, including academy style spaces and rooftop pitches, plus programmes designed for different age groups. Even if you are not a football obsessive, the concept makes sense. Facilities built to a higher standard tend to be used more often, and they create a community culture that feels active rather than passive. It is the difference between “we have a gym” and “people actually train here.” Wellness is treated with the same level of intent. Instead of leaning on vague spa language, the project highlights hydrotherapy, cryo suites, meditation spaces, and recovery focused zones. It reads like a place that expects residents to care about wellbeing as part of their daily rhythm. For buyers who spend a lot of time travelling or working long hours, that kind of built in support can be the feature that makes the decision feel justified. Then you have the waterfront layer, which is honestly what most people are buying into on Yas Island. Crystal lagoons, promenades, infinity pools, and open air decks give it a resort edge, but the key is how those spaces connect to the homes. The way it is described, layouts are meant to feel open, natural light is prioritised, and private outdoor areas do not feel like an afterthought. When a community gets that right, you feel it every day, not just when guests visit. The social side rounds it out. Dining venues, cafés, lounges, and curated events are all part of the picture, and that matters because a waterfront development can feel flat without a strong sense of atmosphere. Branded projects work best when the brand influences the experience, not just the marketing. Here, the aim is clearly to create a place where residents have things to do, reasons to gather, and spaces that feel like they belong to the identity of the project.

Manchester City, Yas Residences, Dubai
Request details for this project.
Floor plans, payment plan, available units — directly from the developer. No middlemen.
