Some thirty years ago, a large proportion of the population in Saudi Arabia
lived in adobe settlements. With the increase in national income which res
ulted from the increase in oil prices in the 1970s and the availability of
easy interest-free house loans, many people abandoned their adobe houses an
d moved to new reinforced concrete houses in new neighborhoods or in new se
ttlements a few miles away from the old ones. As a result, many dilapidated
buildings remain in the center of towns and cities and in totally abandone
d settlements. This paper examines the factors that led to these phenomena,
some of which relate to rising housing standards and the difficulty of upg
rading adobe houses and adobe settlements to meet the new standards. The pa
per then examines the current municipal policies with regard to abandoned h
ouses and settlements and suggests some courses of action.