@alshalni8: #حفر الباطن #الزلفي

Alshalani
Alshalani
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Region: SA
Friday 08 May 2026 17:48:51 GMT
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ra3ifaz3a3
salem :
الخساره والله كلامك
2026-05-09 09:26:06
80
plmnhyfxzaq
plmnhyfxzaq :
ليش اسمها خساره
2026-05-08 20:14:17
4
mu.9009
Musa :
فوق ٦٠ سنه
2026-05-08 21:30:35
8
abokhalee0
ابو خالد :
طيب معلم قديم من وجهة نظري لاتزال ترمم على شكلها ويستفاد منها بمشروع ترفيهي يستفاد منه إذا كانت قريبه من من حفر الباطن مع زيادة مساحتها إذا غير مضره ماهو منطق تزال إلا إذا كان ضروري ٠ مواطن مخلص لوطنه وولاة امره 👌تحياتي ✌️
2026-05-08 23:53:31
12
bu_khazna
🤍🇰🇼bu_khazna :
هذي نفس واحد من الربع لا تنفع الرايح ولاتنفع الجاي
2026-05-10 04:36:29
3
user78198513590931
عابر سبيل :
الله يغفر لـ راعيها غنيم السعود البرازي بناها في ١٩٧٨ وشتغلت في ١٩٨٠ وتوقفت بعد وفاته في ٨٣ م .
2026-05-09 02:37:04
15
user2232457952003
عطالله الشعلاني :
الشعلاني….. ونعم
2026-05-09 12:57:43
1
shgoon_222
الشاعره شجون🇰🇼🎙️ :
عزاااااه
2026-05-11 02:41:44
2
hhxx190
شہمريہه :
اسم على مسمى
2026-05-10 09:08:30
3
user9024335817763
فرحان العنزي :
فيه كلام يقال للي ما ينفع & انت مثل محطة خساره ما تنفع الرايح ولا الجاي 😂
2026-05-09 05:59:50
4
mlfee_
ملفي الظفيري :
بعض العـرب تزهـا عليه الاماره المعضله عنـده مثل شربة الماي و بعض العرب كنه محطة خساره لا تنفع الرايـح و لا تنفع الجاي
2026-05-10 01:22:26
4
sstt8975
&&& :
احسب ان المذيع محمد الشلهوب
2026-05-11 13:13:00
2
lavina.abaya3
LAVINA.ABAYA🇰🇼 :
سبحان الله عاد افرح اذا شفتها وانا رايحه وراده .. احسها ماتبقى من محطات الزمن الجميل
2026-05-09 22:51:58
8
alibnsaleem443
معرض دارالعساف للاثاث المكتبي :
ياحرام
2026-05-10 11:27:08
1
appleuser96779820
﮼عبدالعزيز🇰🇼 :
عزاه
2026-05-10 12:50:04
1
user9887826801970
محمد :
خسارة
2026-05-10 05:23:02
1
rahafh535
الخياله 🌷 :
ايه والله ذكريات 😂 حتي حنا بالكويت نعرفهاااا
2026-05-10 15:15:17
1
ox3s1_
Mohammed . :
عزاه
2026-05-10 16:18:07
1
amjad8054
أمجد :
ياخسارة🤣
2026-05-09 10:56:41
1
.bnsh5
🇸🇦 bn-Sh 🇸🇦العنزي🇸🇦 :
عمرها الاكيد اكثر من 50 سنه ولكن بالظبط مادري
2026-05-09 02:38:32
2
shammari919
shammari919 :
افا ليه
2026-05-09 10:55:39
1
user3619530840224
ريكان ريكان :
جيل الطيبين
2026-05-09 12:34:39
1
ahmedoooq8
Ahmed :
ياخي نحتاج محطات محترمه نظيفه بطريق السفر
2026-05-10 08:05:33
1
qz0.q
BLUETooth :
التطوير افضل من التغيير
2026-05-10 16:34:23
1
iekys
Khalidـ🤸🏻‍♂️ :
المقطع ٢٠٢٥ ؟
2026-05-09 07:24:05
1
To see more videos from user @alshalni8, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

🏡 Hilliard Just Approved New Homes Inside a Protected Watershed — While the Rules Are Being Rewritten 📧 Comment “REPORT” for more insights on what’s driving growth across Central Ohio. Here’s a local decision that sits right at the intersection of housing demand and conservation. Here’s what happened. Hilliard City Council approved the rezoning for Clover Meadows, an 80-acre development that will bring 79 single-family homes to the east side of Elliot Road, near Scioto Darby Road. The builder is Fischer Homes. What makes it notable isn’t the size — it’s the location and the timing. The site sits in the Big Darby watershed, a sensitive aquatic ecosystem, and the approval came while the rules governing that area are actively being rewritten. So why was it approved now? The Big Darby Accord — the framework protecting the watershed since 2006 — is being updated, and that amendment process was paused in April for more coordination between the city of Columbus and its partners, with plans to resume this fall. But a pause on the rules doesn’t freeze development applications. The city has been clear: projects keep moving, and staff are being directed to review them against the stronger draft standards where they apply. The conservation guardrails are the key detail. To get approved, the project was rezoned into Hilliard’s Conservation District, which capped it at 79 homes and required a large share of the land to stay open. City officials say Clover Meadows actually preserves 70% of the site as open space — well above the 50% the draft accord calls for. Their argument is that this is growth done within the conservation rules, not around them. Zoom out for a second. This is what the next phase of Central Ohio growth increasingly looks like: real housing demand pushing into areas with real environmental sensitivity, and local governments trying to thread the needle between the two. How places like Hilliard balance new rooftops against protecting watersheds will shape both home values and quality of life on the west side for years. It’s worth watching which way that balance tips when the accord amendment picks back up this fall. Source: Columbus Business First Gagan Columbus, Ohio REALTOR
🏡 Hilliard Just Approved New Homes Inside a Protected Watershed — While the Rules Are Being Rewritten 📧 Comment “REPORT” for more insights on what’s driving growth across Central Ohio. Here’s a local decision that sits right at the intersection of housing demand and conservation. Here’s what happened. Hilliard City Council approved the rezoning for Clover Meadows, an 80-acre development that will bring 79 single-family homes to the east side of Elliot Road, near Scioto Darby Road. The builder is Fischer Homes. What makes it notable isn’t the size — it’s the location and the timing. The site sits in the Big Darby watershed, a sensitive aquatic ecosystem, and the approval came while the rules governing that area are actively being rewritten. So why was it approved now? The Big Darby Accord — the framework protecting the watershed since 2006 — is being updated, and that amendment process was paused in April for more coordination between the city of Columbus and its partners, with plans to resume this fall. But a pause on the rules doesn’t freeze development applications. The city has been clear: projects keep moving, and staff are being directed to review them against the stronger draft standards where they apply. The conservation guardrails are the key detail. To get approved, the project was rezoned into Hilliard’s Conservation District, which capped it at 79 homes and required a large share of the land to stay open. City officials say Clover Meadows actually preserves 70% of the site as open space — well above the 50% the draft accord calls for. Their argument is that this is growth done within the conservation rules, not around them. Zoom out for a second. This is what the next phase of Central Ohio growth increasingly looks like: real housing demand pushing into areas with real environmental sensitivity, and local governments trying to thread the needle between the two. How places like Hilliard balance new rooftops against protecting watersheds will shape both home values and quality of life on the west side for years. It’s worth watching which way that balance tips when the accord amendment picks back up this fall. Source: Columbus Business First Gagan Columbus, Ohio REALTOR

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