Diriyah Company, which is wholly owned by the Public Investment Fund (PIF), has awarded a $490 million (SAR 1.84 billion) construction contract for the Saudi Arabia Museum of Contemporary Art (SAMoCA) in Diriyah. The contract went to a joint venture between Albawani Company Ltd. and Hassan Allam Construction Saudi L.L.C., described as a boost to Saudi Arabia’s private sector. The museum is a flagship project by the Museums Commission. It is intended to document, research, exhibit, and champion Saudi modern and contemporary art, while supporting Saudi artists across generations.
The design and delivery details signal a “big-asset” approach to cultural construction. The museum is designed by the U.K.-based firm Godwin Austen Johnson, with multidisciplinary support from Rafaat Miller Consulting. It will have a gross floor area of 45,252 square meters and a total built-up area of 77,428 square meters. SAMoCA has also achieved Mostadam Gold sustainability certification at both the design and construction stages. As a cultural anchor, the new museum at Diriyah will serve as the flagship home of SAMoCA, while SAMOCA at JAX Center continues to operate as a dynamic exhibition space in Riyadh’s creative district.
What the Contract Suggests About Cultural-Asset Construction in Diriyah
Placed inside Diriyah’s wider build-out, the award reads as more than a single facility contract. Diriyah is described as one of five giga-projects—together with ROSHN, Red Sea Global, Qiddiya, and NEOM—intended to drive expansion and diversification of the Saudi economy under Vision 2030. In project-wide terms, Diriyah is a $63.2 billion integrated urban development that has awarded over $29 billion in construction contracts. Once complete, it is expected to contribute approximately $18.6 billion directly to the Kingdom’s GDP, create more than 180,000 jobs, be home to an estimated 100,000 people, and welcome 50 million annual visits.
That context reframes the Diriyah Museum of Contemporary Art contract as a destination differentiator with a long planning horizon. Commentary linked to the award argues that a flagship museum helps position Diriyah as more than a real estate play. It can support footfall and help create a durable long-term visitor economy. The program also fits a broader destination mix. Diriyah is planned to include museums, shopping districts, a university, the Diriyah Opera House, the Diriyah Arena, a variety of food and beverage outlets, and nearly 40 world-class resorts and hotels spanning its two main masterplans.
The messaging around the museum reinforces the strategic intent. Diriyah Company’s Group Chief Executive Officer, Jerry Inzerillo, said SAMoCA will provide Saudi and international artists with a “truly world-class platform” and further elevate Diriyah’s reputation as the Kingdom’s capital of culture. The Museums Commission CEO, Eng. Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al-Hammad, described it as the “epicenter of Saudi modern and contemporary art,” designed to champion generations of Saudi artists while inviting international dialogue. Taken together, the award combines large-scale contracting, certified sustainability targets, and institution-led cultural programming as core requirements for major cultural-asset construction.
Who won the contract to build the Saudi Arabia Museum of Contemporary Art in Diriyah?
How much is the Diriyah Museum of Contemporary Art contract worth?
What is the planned size of SAMoCA in Diriyah?
What sustainability certification has the museum achieved?
What role will SAMoCA play alongside SAMOCA at JAX Center in Riyadh?