This article is about Algerian city. For the Moroccan city, see Casablanca.
Dar El Beïda (Arabic: الدار البيضاء) is a suburb of Algiers, Algeria. It is the seat of the district with the same name. During French colonial times, it was officially called by its French name Maison Blanche (French pronunciation:[mɛzɔ̃blɑ̃ʃ]), which meant the same thing as its current Arabic name: (the) white house. (This Arabic name is shared with Casablanca in Morocco, in that case a translation from Spanish). It is pronounced [adːaːralbajdˤaːʔ] in Classical Arabic and [(ə)dɑr.(əl)bɑjdɑ] in Darja.
It has an area of 3200 hectares (32 km2/12 sq mi). It is home to the international Houari Boumedienne Airport, the largest in Algeria. The airport is divided into two main terminals, one for international flights and the other one for domestic flights.
It has 44,753 inhabitants as of the 1998 census. In 1987 it had 12,900 inhabitants.[1]
Economy
It is home to an industrial park which it shares with the neighboring municipality of Oued Smar. Historic municipal budgets include: