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Kazakhstan’s Alatau: A Smart City Project Between Strategic Ambition and the Test of Reality

19-05-2026 10:27 AM


Ammon News - By: Abdulhamid Hamid Al-Kba- Across the plains north of Almaty, Kazakhstan is developing a new smart city with an estimated cost of around $25 billion, as part of an ambitious urban project that some local observers describe as an attempt to create the “Singapore of Central Asia.”

The city carries the name “Alatau,” a Kazakh word associated with the country’s famous southern mountain ranges and often translated as “multicolored mountains,” reflecting the seasonal changes in the landscape. Yet the new Alatau is being presented not merely as an urban expansion project, but as a distinct economic and legal model designed to redefine the relationship between technology, investment, and urban development in Central Asia.

The project is strategically located along the transport corridor linking Western Europe and Western China, giving it significance that goes far beyond traditional urban planning and placing it within Kazakhstan’s broader vision of becoming a regional logistics and digital hub across Eurasia.

Since the former village of Zhetigen was granted the status of a city of regional importance in early 2024, Alatau has gradually evolved into a national flagship project receiving direct political attention. That momentum later accelerated when the city was granted a special legal framework providing regulatory and administrative powers different from those of other Kazakh cities.

Alatau extends across nearly 96,500 hectares, making it one of the largest new-city projects in Central Asia, with an area roughly twice the size of nearby Almaty.

Under the master plan, the city is designed as a multi-centered urban hub that includes:

a financial and commercial district,

educational and medical clusters,

industrial and logistics zones,

as well as tourism and leisure projects along the Kapchagay reservoir.


According to long-term official plans, Alatau could eventually accommodate around 1.9 million residents and generate nearly one million jobs in technology, services, and the digital economy as part of a development vision extending to 2050.

Despite these ambitions, Kazakh local media coverage suggests that the project remains in an early foundational stage, although it has gradually begun moving from paper planning toward physical implementation on the ground.

Over the past two years, authorities have focused primarily on establishing the city’s legal and administrative foundations while simultaneously preparing core infrastructure and attracting initial investments.

Parliament approved a special constitutional law for Alatau, later confirmed by the Constitutional Court and formally signed by the president, in a move aimed at creating a more flexible governance model capable of reducing bureaucracy and facilitating investment procedures.

At the same time, an independent administrative authority was established to serve as a unified gateway for investors, alongside the approval of the final master plan and the expansion of the surrounding special economic zone.

On the implementation side, the government has already begun developing electricity, water, and engineering infrastructure networks, while official data points to dozens of investment projects worth billions of dollars across industry, logistics, and technology sectors.

Among the announced developments is the futuristic “Iconic Towers” complex, designed with the participation of global firms including Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and Zaha Hadid Architects, in addition to plans for educational and technological partnerships with South Korean institutions.

Meanwhile, field reports indicate that large sections of the future city still resemble open infrastructure construction zones, where current work remains focused on upgrading roads, communications networks, water systems, and basic services. This reflects the natural gap between ambitious visions and on-the-ground execution during the early phases of large-scale futuristic urban projects.

Kazakhstan is clearly attempting to draw lessons from successful Asian economic and urban models such as Shenzhen and Singapore by creating a more flexible environment capable of attracting global companies, investment, and advanced technologies.

However, international experience shows that building smart cities depends not only on legal reforms and modern infrastructure, but also on the ability to create a sustainable real economy capable of attracting residents, talent, and long-term investment.

This is where Alatau’s central challenge emerges: can the city transform into a genuine economic and urban center, or will it remain a highly ambitious project driven primarily by state planning and directed investment?

The success of the “digital city” model will depend on more complex factors, including:

administrative efficiency,

sustainable financing,

digital governance,

cybersecurity,

and the state’s ability to balance economic flexibility with regulatory oversight.


At the same time, social and developmental challenges remain equally important, particularly regarding the city’s future ability to provide a balanced and livable urban environment for different social groups.

Urban experiences in Kazakhstan over recent years have shown that the rapid growth of major economic centers such as Almaty and Astana has been accompanied by steadily rising housing and living costs, raising broader questions about how to balance investment-driven growth with long-term affordability and quality of life.

For that reason, Alatau’s success will ultimately be measured not only by the scale of investment or the speed of construction, but also by its ability to create a sustainable city capable of attracting residents, retaining talent, and delivering balanced economic and social development.

Although it remains too early to deliver a final judgment on the project, Alatau clearly reflects Kazakhstan’s broader attempt to redefine its development model at a time of intensifying regional competition over technology, logistics, and investment.

Between strategic ambition and practical realities, Alatau today appears less like a completed city and more like a large-scale economic and urban experiment open to multiple outcomes. Over the next decade, it could emerge as one of Central Asia’s most important new growth centers — or face the same structural challenges that have complicated other futuristic city projects once visionary planning meets the realities of implementation and market economics.


Abdulhamid Hamid Al-Kba- Opinion writer specializing in Central Asia and Azerbaijan affairs




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