Where India Meets the World in Dubai’s Cultural Quarter

From arthouse cinema to haute couture and sky-high dining, Dubai feels like a second home for India’s creative class.

LAST UPDATED: FEB 20, 2026, 11:41 IST|6 min read
A picture of the Aura SkyPool in Dubai.Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism

A poster of Pakeezah — Kamal Amrohi’s 1972 classic — hangs inside Cinema Akil, the Gulf’s first independent arthouse cinema. It’s a quiet but telling image: Meena Kumari’s tragic courtesan presiding over a screening room in Alserkal Avenue, Dubai’s warehouse-turned-cultural district. Step outside, and the dialogue between India and the world only gets richer.

Alserkal is where Jaipur Rugs has created a caverous store designed like a Rajasthani stepwell — a piece of Jaipur’s architectural memory reflected through Dubai’s industrial, warehouse aesthetic. Nearby, Indian labels such as Outhouse Jewellery and Misho find pride of place at The Edit, a concept store spotlighting women-led sustainable brands. At Bkry, conversations take place over flaky croissants and strong coffee, while Kokoro, considered to be the region’s first dedicated hand-rolled bar, draws a design-forward crowd.

Alserkal Avenue.Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism

This is also where you’ll find The Junction staging community productions — Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream included — and The Flip Side spinning records for a new generation of crate-diggers. The Ishara Art Foundation anchors South Asian contemporary art in the district, while niche spaces such as Hikma Herbal and CHIKA — a Japanese-inspired abaya label that is every bit as cool as it sounds — underline the city’s knack for hybrid identities.

Dubai may be a melting pot, but India is one of its most visible flavours. There’s Subko brewing beans sourced from Indian estates, and fashion designer Manish Malhotra, who treats the city as a second home, complete with a flagship boutique. Bollywood’s glitterati fly in for shows and fashion week finales — Kriti Sanon among them — and often check into One&Only One Za'abeel, whose futuristic silhouette and sky-high pool have made it a social media fixture.

Sushi at TakaHisa.Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism

When Sanjay Dutt is in town, he makes a beeline for TakaHisa. “Went to the best Japanese restaurant in Dubai, the food and service was outstanding, thank you Chef Taka and Chef Hisa for the amazing food!!!… TakaHisa is a must,” he posted on Instagram, praising Chef Taka and Chef Hisa. The draw? Hand-rolled sushi, pristine ingredients, and a direct sightline to the Burj Khalifa. In a city that loves spectacle, TakaHisa’s near-silent dining room — no music, out of respect for residential neighbours — feels almost radical.

Seafood being prepared at Iliana.Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism

For panoramic drama, the world’s highest 360-degree infinity pool at Aura Skypool frames the Palm in cinematic fashion, while Sirene by Gaia offers glamour and a dessert menu worth lingering over. A leisurely lunch at Iliana pairs seafood with sweeping sea views.

An abra ride across the Dubai Creek.Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism

Ahead of Ramadan, when the city’s markets take on a sense of anticipation, a cultural walk through old Dubai offers a different, earthier counterpoint. In the lanes of Al Fahidi Historical Neighbourhood, towers cast angular shadows over coral-stone houses, while galleries and calligraphy studios hum quietly in the heat. A short hop across the creek on a traditional abra — the wooden boats that have ferried traders for generations — brings one to the spice-scented bustle of Dubai Spice Souk.

A souk.Dubai Department of Economy and Tourism

In Dubai, cultures don’t simply coexist; they collaborate. A Banarasi brocade at Orient 499, a Japanese abaya, a Rajasthani stepwell, a Hindi film poster — all within a few blocks. For Indian creatives and global tastemakers alike, the city is less a stopover and more a second act.

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