CAIRO, October 29, 2025: Egypt’s $1 billion Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM) in Giza has been awarded the EDGE Advanced Green Building Certification 2024, making it the first museum in Africa and the Middle East to achieve this global sustainability recognition. The certification, granted by the International Finance Corporation (IFC), positions the GEM among a select group of cultural institutions worldwide meeting the highest standards of environmental performance. According to an official statement from the Egyptian Cabinet, the recognition supports Egypt’s commitment to sustainable development under Egypt Vision 2030. The museum’s design and operations aim to reduce carbon emissions, conserve energy and water, and integrate modern technologies to enhance resource efficiency.

The government described the achievement as a reflection of Egypt’s broader national efforts to align cultural infrastructure with environmental stewardship. The EDGE Advanced certification is awarded to buildings that surpass conventional performance by at least 40 percent in energy efficiency, water use, and embodied energy in materials. The Grand Egyptian Museum exceeds these thresholds, achieving reductions of more than 60 percent in energy consumption and 34 percent in water use compared with standard benchmarks. Its architectural design includes reflective roofing, advanced shading systems, energy-efficient lighting, and smart monitoring meters, along with low-flow water fixtures to reduce consumption while preserving optimal conditions for artifact conservation.
Egypt aligns sustainable design with Vision 2030 goals
Situated near the Giza Pyramids Plateau, the Grand Egyptian Museum spans approximately 490,000 square meters and is the largest archaeological museum complex in the world. It will display over 100,000 artefacts representing 5,000 years of Egyptian civilization, including the complete collection of King Tutankhamun’s treasures, shown together for the first time. The museum also features extensive restoration laboratories, visitor education facilities, and large-scale galleries built to international standards. The Egyptian government emphasized that the certification marks a milestone in the country’s sustainable development agenda.
King Tutankhamun collection to debut in full for first time
It said the GEM demonstrates how heritage preservation can be integrated with environmental performance, contributing to Egypt’s leadership in responsible tourism and cultural innovation. The certification process, verified through the IFC’s EDGE assessment system, confirmed the museum’s compliance with global best practices in green building design. Developed by the World Bank Group, the EDGE program promotes sustainable construction by quantifying energy and water savings in measurable terms. The Grand Egyptian Museum is set to open to the public on Saturday, November 1, 2025, after more than two decades of planning and construction.
Once operational, it will serve as a cultural and educational hub expected to attract millions of visitors annually. Its proximity to the Giza Pyramids and advanced environmental design are expected to strengthen Egypt’s position as a leading destination for cultural tourism. With the EDGE Advanced certification, the Grand Egyptian Museum establishes a new benchmark for sustainable museum design in the Middle East and Africa, combining cultural preservation with measurable environmental performance in a single world-class institution. – By Content Syndication Services.
