Loading...

mosque
partly-cloudy
°C,

Al Noor Island: Sharjah’s lagoon of art, Light and culture living

July 01, 2026 / 4:54 PM
Al Noor Island Sharjahs lagoon of art Light and culture living
download-img
Sharjah24: In the middle of Khalid Lagoon, Al Noor Island offers a different way to experience Sharjah. It is not a museum, and it is not a conventional park. Developed by the Sharjah Investment and Development Authority (Shurooq), the island sits somewhere between both: a quiet cultural space where art, architecture, landscape and light are brought together to shape how people move through the city.

At a time when leading cultural cities are placing creativity beyond gallery walls, Al Noor Island reflects Sharjah’s own approach to public culture. It brings art into the open, not as decoration, but as part of the visitor journey. The result is a destination that invites people to slow down, observe more closely and engage with the city through its details.

Art that belongs to the landscape

Across the island, artworks are positioned as part of the environment. They appear along pathways, between trees and beside the water, allowing each piece to be experienced through movement, reflection and changing light.

At the entrance, Torus by British artist David Harber captures the island’s surroundings through its mirrored circular surface, reflecting the trees, sky and lagoon as visitors pass by. Nearby, Flutter by Chris Wood draws on the movement of migrating butterflies, connecting the work to the island’s natural setting.

The sensory experience continues with OVO, an egg-shaped installation that uses light and reflection to create an immersive moment within the greenery. The Columns by Austrian artist Susanne Schmögner adds colour and rhythm to the walkways, with painted forms rising between the plants and trees.

The island also carries a local cultural memory through The Swing by Emirati artist Azza Al Qubaisi. Inspired by the UAE’s pearl-diving heritage, the work overlooks Khalid Lagoon and recalls the women who once waited on the shore for the return of the divers. It gives the island’s contemporary art experience a distinctly Emirati connection to place, water and memory.

Designed for discovery

Al Noor Island’s strength lies in the way its elements work together. The artworks are not isolated features. They are part of a wider design language shaped by pathways, planting, architecture, lighting and views of the lagoon.

The Butterfly House is one of the clearest examples of this approach. Its distinctive metallic structure, inspired by the natural world of butterflies, combines architecture with environmental learning. Inside, hundreds of butterflies are housed in a carefully maintained habitat, offering visitors an encounter with nature that is both beautiful and educational.

Together, these elements make the island more than a collection of attractions. They create a cultural environment that changes throughout the day, from the reflections of morning light to the atmosphere of the island after sunset.

In that sense, Al Noor Island offers a quiet but powerful reading of Sharjah’s cultural identity. It shows how art can become part of public life, how design can shape the way people experience a place, and how a city can make culture visible in the spaces people move through every day.

July 01, 2026 / 4:54 PM

More on this Topic

Rotate For an optimal experience, please
rotate your device to portrait mode.