Wynn Al Marjan Island completes all hotel structural work, cites progress on Wynn Bridge link road
Summary
Wynn Resorts says major structural milestones have been hit at its US$5.21 billion Wynn Al Marjan Island resort in Ras Al Khaimah. All structural works for the resort’s 1,530 guest accommodations are complete and the project’s signature tower topped out at 299 metres in December 2025. Façade installation and interior fit-out are underway across the property.
Separately, construction of the Wynn Bridge — a 548-metre link intended to connect the resort (via Wynn Boulevard) to the E311 and E611 and create a direct route between Dubai and the Northern Emirates — is progressing to plan. Piling works are complete, nine of 10 bridge column piles are in place and overall bridge completion is at 48%, with target completion in late 2026.
Key Points
- All structural works for 1,530 guest accommodations (rooms, suites, townhouses, Marina Estates) are finished; interior fit-out is now in progress.
- The resort’s signature tower has topped out at 299 metres, with structural concrete completed through the 71st floor roof.
- Tower façade installation is 83% complete (21,852 of 26,471 panels installed) and the structural steel roof crown installation has begun.
- Wynn Bridge is 548 metres long, intended to link Wynn Al Marjan Island to the E311 and E611; bridge is 48% complete with piling works done and nine of 10 column piles installed.
- Low-rise structures are 99% complete for combined concrete and structural steel works (482,127 cubic metres of concrete and 15,162 tons of steel).
- Mechanical, electrical and finishing works are progressing; elevators/escalators are being installed and podium low-zone air-conditioning has been commissioned to enable fine finishes.
- The resort spans over 60 hectares and will include 1,217 resort rooms, 297 Enclave suites, two Royal Apartments, four Garden Townhomes and 10 Marina Estates.
- Facilities planned: 22 restaurants, lounges and bars, a beach club, spa and beauty destination, skylit luxury shopping parterre, theatre (The Showroom), Coral Court events venue, 12 pools, a 420-metre white-sand beach and a deep-water marina for superyachts.
Why should I read this?
Quick, punchy take: big milestone hit. Structural work finished for every room and major bridge progress means this megaproject has moved from concrete to fittings — the expensive, visible stuff that actually makes a resort open. If you care about Gulf resort development, investor returns, supply chains or regional tourism competition, this is one to note. We’ve skimmed the technical bits so you don’t have to — it’s on schedule and getting shiny.