






Ahmadi is the company town for the Kuwait Oil Company (KOC), which was built beginning in the 1940s. The Kuwait News Agency writes that, “Al-Ahmadi City is associated with the glorious development of Kuwait in the modern era. Sheikh Ahmad Al-Jaber… established the city for the oil company employees. With the success of oil exploration in Burgan field and export of the first shipment of oi from Al-Ahmadi port in June 1946, Al-Ahmadi began to grow and prosper, and became central in the petroleum industry while hosting headquarters for the oil companies. The city sits on a ridge, which rises 400 feet above sea level. The residents of the city were a mixture of various Arab nationalities in addition to European expats who formed large majority which had the impact on the nature and the layouts of the city.” You can learn more about the history of the town by reading the dissertation of Reem Alissa entitled “Building for Oil.” Here are some of the sites you can visit in Ahmadi today:
The Catholic Church, which was established in the 1950s




The Ahmad Al-Jaber Oil & Gas Exhibition







Ahmadi Market, which the photographer Huda Abdulmughni documented in a 2015 project

















Below are old postcards of Ahmadi found on eBay, Delcampe, and this website.















These historic photographs come the flickr of Brett Jordan, this website and this article.
















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