Uzbekistan’s mountain tourism is about to get a major upgrade. Construction has officially commenced on the Arashan Resort, a tourism complex that will transform a 600-hectare swathe of the Namangan region’s foothills into a year-round destination. With Japanese partner Nippon Global Education and Assessment ensuring international standards, this represents a calculated bet on Central Asia’s untapped mountain tourism potential.
The first phase — financed by foreign direct investment — is targeting completion by the end of 2026, an aggressive schedule that signals genuine commitment rather than typical project drift in the region. When fully operational, the resort will handle 2,500 tourists daily and serve roughly 912,000 visitors annually. For Namangan, the employment impact will be substantial: over 2,000 new jobs will support the local economy.
Diverse tourism infrastructure
The facility design covers the full tourism spectrum. Winter sports infrastructure includes ski complexes and a 10-kilometer zipline for the adrenaline crowd. Wellness seekers will find thermal water pools and recreational zones. Families and cultural tourists can explore thematic parks, an open-air cinema, playgrounds, and an eco-market. Comprehensive hospitality facilities will complete the infrastructure.
Geographic advantage and market access
Location works decisively in the project’s favor. Tashkent — Uzbekistan’s economic and administrative hub — is just two hours away by road (140 kilometers). Kokand is 93 kilometers away, Andijan roughly 201 kilometers. This proximity to major population centers means the resort isn’t dependent solely on international arrivals; a consistent domestic visitor stream is virtually assured given the large regional population base.
Regional development strategy alignment
The groundbreaking ceremony, held as the Navruz holiday celebrations began, drew regional administration officials, state and public organization representatives, and community leaders. Their attendance underscored the development’s centrality to Namangan’s economic diversification strategy. This project sits within Uzbekistan’s broader resort development initiative, announced in 2025, which aims to establish multiple large-scale facilities across mountain regions throughout the country, backed by significant state infrastructure investment.
Opportunities for international business engagement
For foreign investors in construction, interior design, hospitality management, and tourism services, Arashan Resort opens tangible market opportunities in Uzbekistan’s emerging resort economy. A 600-hectare complex requires sustained engagement from specialized suppliers across construction materials, building systems, interior furnishings, and hospitality equipment — all sourced to meet international quality requirements. With the first phase’s timeline approaching, the window for participation in subsequent development phases and parallel regional projects is widening. The model’s success could trigger additional resort developments across Uzbekistan’s mountain regions, multiplying opportunities for foreign firms in construction and design sectors pursuing Central Asian market entry. This signals broader market opening in hospitality infrastructure development where international technical expertise and supply chains are both needed and valued.



