A video wall in the UAE is usually specified through a Dubai or Abu Dhabi AV integrator and built on a proprietary hardware controller. This is a buyer-side guide to the alternative: a software-defined video wall for UAE control rooms, smart-city and command centres, NOC/SOC, transport and airport operations, and corporate AV — English-first, on-premises for data residency, on commodity Linux GPU servers, with a one-time perpetual licence and no per-display subscription.
Where video walls run in the UAE
The UAE is the most English-first, integrator-dense AV market in the Gulf, concentrated in Dubai and Abu Dhabi. The strongest fits are:
- Smart-city & government operations centres — municipal command centres unifying CCTV, traffic, safety, and utility data across Dubai and Abu Dhabi.
- Transport & airport control rooms — metro, road, and airport operations, mixing CCTV, passenger-flow dashboards, and incident boards.
- Oil, gas & utility control rooms — process, pipeline, and dispatch monitoring for the national energy and water operators.
- Telecom & data-centre NOC/SOC — operators running 24/7 network and security monitoring.
- Corporate AV — headquarters briefing rooms, boardrooms, and executive dashboards in DIFC, ADGM, and the free-zone towers.
Software-defined versus the hardware-controller default
Most UAE walls today are sold as a proprietary controller plus integration. A software-defined wall keeps the integrator relationship but moves the controller into software on commodity Linux GPU servers — so input count scales with the server rather than a fixed hardware SKU, and the refresh is a server refresh rather than a forklift controller replacement. Inputs such as RTSP and NDI cameras, web dashboards, SCADA views, and IP-KVM become software sources, and operators drive the wall from a browser with role-based access. Model the five-year number with the video wall TCO calculator and the software-vs-hardware TCO breakdown.
Priced in dirhams, on-prem, no subscription
Craft Wall is a one-time perpetual licence of roughly AED 10,000 per canvas (listed as €2,500), with unlimited displays, sources, operators, and canvases — no recurring per-display fee. It runs on-premises on your own Linux GPU servers and is air-gap capable, so operational data stays inside your network with no mandatory cloud control plane — the usual requirement for government, transport, and energy deployments in the UAE.
The UAE sits inside the wider Gulf picture — see the GCC video wall guide for the regional view and the Saudi Arabia guide for the giga-project angle. For the vendor-neutral shortlist, see the best video wall software in 2026, and for network monitoring, the NOC reference architecture.