Living at The Strand
The Strand is RAK Properties new master planned destination on Ras Al Khaimah’s fast developing mainland, created to feel like a proper place to live rather than a collection of buildings with a nice name. Set within the Marjan Beach master plan, it is positioned as a residential led, mixed use community that blends contemporary urban living with nature, and it is clearly aimed at a new wave of buyers who want walkability, community energy, and everyday convenience built into the address. What makes The Strand easy to picture is how it is structured from the start. The plan is anchored by a walkable green spine, supported by community spaces and a comprehensive retail strategy that is meant to give the development its own rhythm from morning to evening. Instead of treating retail as a corner add on, it is described as one of the foundations of the destination, which usually tells you the developer is thinking about long term livability and not just sales at launch. In terms of scale, The Strand is not a small move. The land area is stated at 185,759 square metres, with 500,000 square metres of gross floor area planned across homes, retail hubs, and a connected public realm of green spaces and community districts. That mix matters because it hints at how the project will feel once it is lived in, more like a town centre atmosphere with residential calm behind it, rather than a single use neighbourhood that empties out. Location is another part of the story, and it is one of the reasons this launch is getting attention. The Strand sits in the heart of the Marjan Beach District and is described as being close to a large public park, with bridge access to Wynn Al Marjan Island, plus proximity to beach clubs and hotels. For buyers, that usually translates into strong future demand drivers, especially as Ras Al Khaimah continues to scale up tourism and lifestyle infrastructure. The investment framing is also very direct. RAK Properties positions The Strand as aligned with the Emirate’s growth goals and as part of the momentum around RAK Vision 2030, with the development intended to support demand for higher quality homes on the mainland beyond the developer’s Mina waterfront hub. If you are looking at this from an end user angle, it reads as a new address designed around daily life. If you are looking from an investor angle, it reads as an early entry into a district with visible catalysts already taking shape. Commercially, the early market indicators shared alongside the launch are clear. Starting prices are positioned from AED 1.28M, with a 40/60 payment plan, handover targeted for Q1 2029, and unit sizes shown from 598 to 2,852 sq. ft. It is the kind of range that suggests the community will serve more than one buyer profile, from compact homes through to larger layouts suited to longer term living. Apartments in The Strand at Marjan Beach District The Strand’s strongest differentiator is the way it is designed around three connected districts, Creative, Urban, and Garden, each with a specific purpose rather than vague branding. The idea is simple but effective. Not everyone wants the same kind of neighborhood energy every day, so the master plan creates different “moods” within the same destination, while still keeping everything linked through the green spine and pedestrian focused public realm. The Urban District is presented as the energetic center, with co working zones, retail, dining, and streets planned around convenience and movement. This is where the day to day pace will likely live, coffee in the morning, errands in the afternoon, and a more social feel in the evenings. It is not trying to be a mall, it is trying to behave like a neighborhood hub that supports real routines and casual interaction. The Creative District is described as the community’s cultural engine, with studios, workshops, and halls designed to support artists, entrepreneurs, and makers. Whether that becomes a true ecosystem depends on delivery and programming, but the intent is the right one. Communities with creative space tend to develop a stronger identity over time, because people are not only consuming the area, they are contributing to it. Then there is the Garden District, which is built for wellness and decompression. This is where you will find the quieter green spaces, parks, playgrounds, outdoor exercise routes, and slower cafés and relaxation areas. It is a smart counterweight to the Urban District, and it gives the project a more balanced feel, especially for families and residents who value greenery as part of daily life rather than something you drive to on weekends. Across all three districts, the residential product is described in a way that is deliberately reassuring, efficient layouts, high quality finishes, and an emphasis on natural light. It is not trying to sell you a fantasy. It is trying to sell you a home that works, and that matters because livability is what sustains demand. For investors, that same practicality usually supports rental performance, because tenants tend to prefer layouts that feel bright, intuitive, and easy to furnish.

The Strand, Marjan Beach, Dubai
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