Skift Take
Careful planning is required to balance a surge in heritage tourism with the delicate responsibility of protecting the historic sites that hold so much appeal. At this yearâs Skift Global Forum, Melanie de Souza of the Royal Commission for AlUla discussed the regionâs blueprint for sustainable heritage travel in the modern age.
This sponsored content was created in collaboration with a Skift partner.
AlUla, a county the size of Belgium tucked away in northwest Saudi Arabia, is the seat of many millennia of history. The regionâs Nabataean city of Hegra is widely known, but the ancient kingdoms of Dadan and Lihyan also built their thrones in AlUla. Archeologists are still excavating the region, mining for a better understanding of humanity’s origins.
Seven thousand years of civilization have played out in the AlUla region, and much of that ancient history is documented in petroglyphs at Jabal Ikma, AlUlaâs open library. The inscriptions even include some ancient Greek and Latin because AlUlaâs wealth of resources on the popular incense road made it a popular crossing point.Â
âWhen visitors arrive in AlUla, they find stunning landscapes and 900 million years of geology juxtaposed with the lush green of the oasis,â said Melanie de Souza, executive director of destination marketing at the Royal Commission for AlUla at this yearâs Skift Global Forum. De Souza joined Kate Irwin, Skift managing director of EMEA, on stage in New York to explore AlUlaâs development blueprint and the regionâs plans to shape the future of heritage tourism in Saudi Arabia and beyond.
The regionâs rich historical inheritance makes AlUla a poster child for the recent boom in heritage tourism. According to the United Nations World Tourism Organization, cultural and historical travel accounts for about 40 percent of global tourism annually. According to Grand View Research, the market value of the heritage tourism sector is projected to climb from $570.89 billion in 2022 to over $778 billion by 2030.
Welcoming Heritage Travelers While Fending Off Overtourism
Heritage tourismâs popularity means countless travelers are visiting some of the worldâs most ancient and sometimes fragile ecosystems. As the problems of overtourism radiate throughout the travel industry, destinations like AlUla must seriously consider both the benefits and costs of welcoming an influx of visitors.
When Saudi Arabia welcomed international tourists for the first time in 2019, visitor numbers skyrocketed â 27 million international tourists heeded the invitation in 2023. According to de Souza, being a relative latecomer to the heritage tourism trend has given AlUla a chance to learn from other destinations’ successes and mistakes. For example, the county plans to implement a maximum limit of two million annual tourists by 2035 and will cap the number of tourists permitted to visit individual heritage sites each day.
âHow do we go about our tourism in a way that respects both the natural and the built environment?â de Souza asked at Skiftâs event. âAnd how do we encourage our customers to share this ethos?âÂ
AlUlaâs Brand Promise to Revitalize Always, In All Ways
Earlier this year, AlUla manifested those questions with its first-ever brand campaign. âForever Revitalizingâ showcases AlUlaâs breathtaking scenery and puts this ancient oasisâs promise within modern travelersâ reach. The destinationâs brand uplift studies showed over 544 million views in the campaignâs first five months. Close partnerships with airlines and local businesses will help AlUla transition the campaign from awareness into consideration and conversion cycles.
The campaign was designed to introduce AlUla to the global stage and establish its identity as a destination imbued with purpose. Internally, it served as a rallying cry for the critical balance between showing off the regionâs rich cultural heritage and the imperative to conserve it. âIt was very important that this campaign did justice to the locals and the community and how they want their homeland portrayed,â de Souza told Irwin on stage.
âForever Revitalizingâ also shows travelers that they can expect curated, high-quality journeys at AlUla. However, fulfilling modern travelersâ expectations while maintaining the authenticity that makes heritage tourism appealing is a tall order. AlUla has taken a broad approach to cracking that contradiction by tapping back into the regionâs roots as a hotbed of nature, art, and culture.
Combining Nature, Art, and Culture to Attract Modern Heritage Tourists
For example, the Sharaan Nature Reserve was named one of the worldâs greatest places in TIME Magazine this year. Its 193 square miles (1,500 square kilometers) are already home to endangered species like the Arabian wolf, gazelle, and large-eared red fox. The Royal Commission for AlUla hopes its rewilding campaign will restore the flora of the reserve as one step in its efforts toward bringing back the Arabian leopard from the brink of extinction.
In the arts category, AlUla has already hosted three installments of Desert X, a site-specific contemporary art exhibition organized in collaboration with the team behind Coachella. The success of Desert X AlUla has inspired Wadi AlFann, AlUlaâs own outdoor arts celebration, already claiming the likes of James Terrell, Michael Heizer, Ahmed Mater, and Agnes Denes. âFor many of these amazing legends, these are going to be era-defining works,â de Souza told Skiftâs audience.
For activity-minded travelers eager to experience the outdoors, AlUla offers everything from stargazing to ballooning and hiking to cycling. Sixteen miles (26 kilometers) of freshly laid cycling track have enabled AlUla to host the AlUla Tour, where the worldâs best cyclists compete against the regionâs historic backdrop. The sheer range of these experiences evidences just how much thought has gone into developing AlUla as a destination. âThere is so much on the ground that is a reflection of a very carefully considered blueprint for how we are going to grow out this destination,â de Souza said.
This content was created collaboratively by AlUla and Skiftâs branded content studio, SkiftX.