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Architecture of Israel

The architecture of Israel has been influenced by the different architectural styles of those who have inhabited the country over time, sometimes modified to suit the local climate and landscape. Byzantine churches, Crusader castles, Islamic madrasas, Templer houses, Arab arches and minarets, Russian Orthodox onion domes, International Style modernist buildings, sculptural concrete Brutalist architecture, and glass-sided skyscrapers all are part of the architecture of Israel.

History edit

Early period edit

 
Byzantine basilica in the Negev

Ancient regional architecture can be divided into two phases based on building materials — stone and sundried mud brick. Most of the stones used were limestone.[1]

After the Hellenistic period, hard limestone was used for columns, capitals, bases or also the Herodian enclosure walls of the Temple Mount. In the north of the country, basalt was used for building stone, door sockets, door pivots but also for drainage. Fieldstone were placed randomly or laid in courses as well as for polygonal structures, for example it is found in city walls. Rough-hewn Stones and ashlars were used for more complex structure, and they were extracted from quarries. Huge stones were used since the first century B.C. Stone dressing was primarily done with the chisel and the hammer.[1]

Sundried mud bricks were the most used material until modern times, particularly in the coastal plain and valleys. Structures were roofed with timber wooden beams covered by reeds and rushes.[1]

Ottoman period edit

 
Jerusalem stone and metal grillwork

In Lifta, until the end of the 19th century, traditional housing construction consisted of a single room without partitions, divided into levels in accordance with various functions carried out in the house:

  • Rawiyeh – a bottom level at the elevation of the courtyard considered the “dirty” part of the house, used for storage and sheltering livestock.
  • Mastabeh – A higher residential level used for sleeping, eating, hospitality and storage.
  • Sida (gallery) – Another living area above the mastaba, used primarily for sleeping.[2]

In the second half of the 19th century, a residential story characterized by a cross-vault was added above the traditional house, creating a space between the floor with the livestock in the bottom room and the residential story. A separate entrance was installed in each story.[2]

Fortified houses were built outside the village core and had two stories: a raised ground floor with tiny windows used for raising livestock and storage, and a separate residential floor with large windows and balconies. In the courtyard was a small structure used for storage. Sometimes a tabun baking oven would be located inside it.[2]

The first modern building technology was evident in the farmhouses. Iron beams were used and the roofs were made of concrete and roof tiles. These structures had balconies with a view and wide doorways.[2]

Modern architecture and town planning edit

Notable architects since WWI edit

 
Government Mint building, Jerusalem, designed by Austen Harrison (1935), built 1937

Sensing the political changes taking place in central Europe around the time of the First World War, as well as the stirrings of Zionist ideals about the re-establishment of a homeland for Jews, numerous Jewish architects from around Europe emigrated to Palestine during the first three decades of the 20th century. While much innovative planning occurred during the time of the British Mandatory authorities, 1920–1948, in particular the town plan for Tel Aviv in 1925 by Patrick Geddes, it would be architecture designed in the modernist "Bauhaus" style that would fill the plots of that plan; among the architects who emigrated to Palestine at that time, and who went on to establish formidable careers were: Yehuda Magidovitch, Shmuel Mestechkin (1908-2004; specialised in kibbutz architecture),[3] Lucjan Korngold (1897-1963; Poland and Brazil; the Rubinsky House, an early Le Corbusier-style building in Tel Aviv, is often misattributed to him),[4][5][6] Jacob (Jacques, Jacov) Ornstein (1886-1953), Salomon Gepstein (1882-1961), Josef Neufeld (1899–1980) and Elsa Gidoni (1899–1978; née Mandelstamm).[7]

Dov Karmi, Zeev Rechter and Arieh Sharon were among the leading architects of the early 1950s.[8] Rudolf (Reuven) Trostler played an important role in designing the country's early industrial buildings.[8] Dora Gad designed the interiors of the Knesset, the Israel Museum, the country's first large hotels, the Jewish National and University Library, El Al planes and Zim passenger ships.[9] Amnon Niv designed Moshe Aviv Tower, then Israel's tallest building (today it's the second tallest, after the Azrieli Sarona tower). David Resnick was a Brazilian-born Israeli architect who won the Israel Prize in architecture[10] and the Rechter Prize for iconic Jerusalem buildings such as the Israel Goldstein Synagogue and Brigham Young University on Mount Scopus.[11][12]

Movie theaters edit

The architecture of Tel Aviv's movie theaters can be seen as a reflection of Israeli architectural history: The first cinema, the Eden, opened in 1914, was an example of the eclectic style that was in vogue at the time, combining European and Arab traditions. The Mugrabi cinema, designed in 1930, was built in art deco style. In the late 1930s, the Esther, Chen and Allenby theaters were prime examples of the Bauhaus style. In the 1950s and 1960s, brutalist style architecture was exemplified by the Tamar cinema built inside the historic Solel Boneh building on Tel Aviv's Allenby Street.[13]

Late Ottoman period edit

The Templers built homes with tiled roofs like those in the German countryside.[dubious ][citation needed]

Mandate period edit

Housing built during the British Mandate was urban in character, with flat roofs, rectangular doorways and painted floor tiles.[2]

Municipal laws in Jerusalem require that all buildings be faced with local Jerusalem stone.[14] The ordinance dates back to the British Mandate and the governorship of Sir Ronald Storrs[15] and was part of a master plan for the city drawn up in 1918 by Sir William McLean, then city engineer of Alexandria.[16]

Three of the six British town planners of the time were Charles Robert Ashbee, "the most pro-Arab and anti-Zionist" of them,[17] Clifford Holliday and Austen Harrison, another important Mandate-time town planner being the German-Jewish architect Richard Kaufmann.

 
Classical International Style ("Bauhaus") architecture, part of the White City UNESCO World Heritage Site

The White City of Tel Aviv, a collection of over 4,000 buildings from the 1930s built in a locally adapted form of the International Style, has first been named the "White City" in 1984 and has been declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2001.[citation needed]

State of Israel edit

In the 1950s and 1960s, Israel built rows of concrete tenements to accommodate the masses of new immigrants living in the temporary tents and tin shacks of the maabarot, some of these were known as "rakevet" or train in Hebrew due to their relative monotony and length.[18]

From 1948, architecture in Israel was dominated by the need to house masses of new immigrants. The Brutalist concrete style suited Israel's harsh climate and paucity of natural building materials.[19] Today, many such old buildings remain in Israeli cities. Although they are being gradually remodeled as part of the TAMA 38 [he] program which is meant to strengthen old buildings against earthquakes or completely demolished and replaced with more modern housing projects occupying the former site as part of the "pinui binui [he]" (evacuate and build) program, it is expected to take decades before this style of architecture completely disappears from Israel's cities.[20]

 
Azrieli Sarona Tower (finished 2017)

As property values have risen, skyscrapers are going up around the country. The Azrieli Sarona Tower in Tel Aviv is the tallest building in Israel to date.[21]

Ephraim Henry Pavie has evolved from organic architecture towards biomorphism.[22] The Pavie House in Neve Daniel is a rare case of non-geometric, Neo-futuristic blobitecture in Israel.[23]

Museums and archives edit

Tel Aviv has three institutions dedicated to the Bauhaus, or more widely, the International Style: the Bauhaus Center with its own gallery and offering guided city tours (see homepage here), the small Bauhaus Museum with original interior furnishings, established in 2008,[24] and the Liebling Haus center for urbanism, architecture and conservation (see homepage here).

The Munio Gitai Weinraub Museum of Architecture opened in Haifa in 2012.[25]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Aharon Kempinski, Ronny Reich (1992). The Architecture of Ancient Israel: From the Prehistoric to the Persian Periods. Israel Exploration Society. ISBN 9652210137.
  2. ^ a b c d e Heritage Conservation in Israel
  3. ^ Shmuel Mestechkin at GreyScape. Accessed 10 May 2021.
  4. ^ Lucjan Korngold at GreyScape. Accessed 10 May 2021.
  5. ^ Anna Cymer, Lucjan Korngold at culture.pl. Accessed 10 May 2021.
  6. ^ The Rubinsky House, Amnon Bar Or – Tal Gazit Architects Ltd. Accessed 10 May 2021.
  7. ^ Elsa Mandelstamm Gidoni at Pioneering Women of American Architecture. Accessed 10 May 2021.
  8. ^ a b A Concrete Life, Noam Dvir, Haaretz Magazine, October 17, 2008
  9. ^ Dora Gad's private sanctuary
  10. ^ Encyclopedia Judaica, 2008, as quoted by Jewish Virtual Library, retrieved September 13, 2012
  11. ^ Brittain-Catlin, Timothy, "Israel Goldstein Synagogue, Givat Ram campus of the Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel Heinz Rau and David Reznik", Building of the Month, Twentieth Century Society, June 2010, retrieved September 13, 2012
  12. ^ "A mixed modernist message,", Noam Dvir for Haaretz, 2 February 2012. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
  13. ^ Architectural milestones
  14. ^ "Passion Set in Stone". The New York Times. Paul Goldberger for The New York Times. 10 September 1995. Retrieved 2012-08-28.
  15. ^ . Jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Archived from the original on 2016-10-22. Retrieved 2012-08-28.
  16. ^ The British Mandate from "Jerusalem: Life Throughout the Ages in a Holy City". Online course material from the Ingeborg Rennert Center for Jerusalem Studies, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel
  17. ^ King, Anthony D. (2004). Spaces of global cultures: architecture, urbanism, identity. New York: Routledge. p. 168. ISBN 0-415-19619-1. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  18. ^ Encyclopedia of Zionism and Israel, edited by Raphael Patai, Herzl Press, McGraw, New York, 1971 "Architecture and Town Planning in Israel," Vol. 1, pp. 71-76
  19. ^ Sir Banister Fletcher's A History of Architecture
  20. ^ יעברו עשרות שנים עד שבנייני הרכבת ייעלמו
  21. ^ האם מגדל שרונה עזריאלי באמת עקום?
  22. ^ "Futuristic House Biomorphism by Ephraim Henry Pavie Architects and Design". Tuvie. 11 July 2011. Retrieved 10 May 2021.
  23. ^ Kanti, Yonatan (2 April 2012). השראה למכירה: המקרה המוזר של הבית בגוש עציון [Inspiration for sale: The curious case of the house in Gush Etzion]. Nrg Maariv (in Hebrew). Retrieved 10 May 2021.
  24. ^ Hecht, Esther. "Bauhaus Museum Opens in Tel Aviv's White City". Architectural Record. Retrieved 5 September 2012.
  25. ^ Amos Gitai sets up Israel's first architecture museum in memory of his father, Haaretz

Further reading edit

  • Alster, Tal. "How Israel turned homeowners into YIMBYs - Works in Progress". worksinprogress.co (14). Retrieved 18 February 2024. - overview of TAMA 38 and pinui binui renovation programs

External links edit

  • JewishVirtualLibrary.org: Archaeology
  • Arzaworld.com: Historical Architecture and Design in Israel 2018-04-20 at the Wayback Machine
  • A little modesty goes a long way 2008-06-09 at the Wayback Machine by David Kroyanker
  • Fifty Years of Israeli Architecture as Reflected in Jerusalem's Buildings, Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 26 May 1999
  • Israel Architect Design
  • Architecture of Israel Quarterly
  • "Jerusalem: Architecture in the late Ottoman Period" by Lili Eylon

architecture, israel, this, article, about, israel, architecture, quarterly, magazine, magazine, architecture, israel, been, influenced, different, architectural, styles, those, have, inhabited, country, over, time, sometimes, modified, suit, local, climate, l. This article is about Israel s architecture For the quarterly magazine see Architecture of Israel magazine The architecture of Israel has been influenced by the different architectural styles of those who have inhabited the country over time sometimes modified to suit the local climate and landscape Byzantine churches Crusader castles Islamic madrasas Templer houses Arab arches and minarets Russian Orthodox onion domes International Style modernist buildings sculptural concrete Brutalist architecture and glass sided skyscrapers all are part of the architecture of Israel Contents 1 History 1 1 Early period 1 2 Ottoman period 2 Modern architecture and town planning 2 1 Notable architects since WWI 2 2 Movie theaters 2 3 Late Ottoman period 2 4 Mandate period 2 5 State of Israel 3 Museums and archives 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editFurther information Architecture of Palestine Early period edit nbsp Byzantine basilica in the Negev Ancient regional architecture can be divided into two phases based on building materials stone and sundried mud brick Most of the stones used were limestone 1 After the Hellenistic period hard limestone was used for columns capitals bases or also the Herodian enclosure walls of the Temple Mount In the north of the country basalt was used for building stone door sockets door pivots but also for drainage Fieldstone were placed randomly or laid in courses as well as for polygonal structures for example it is found in city walls Rough hewn Stones and ashlars were used for more complex structure and they were extracted from quarries Huge stones were used since the first century B C Stone dressing was primarily done with the chisel and the hammer 1 Sundried mud bricks were the most used material until modern times particularly in the coastal plain and valleys Structures were roofed with timber wooden beams covered by reeds and rushes 1 Ottoman period edit nbsp Jerusalem stone and metal grillwork In Lifta until the end of the 19th century traditional housing construction consisted of a single room without partitions divided into levels in accordance with various functions carried out in the house Rawiyeh a bottom level at the elevation of the courtyard considered the dirty part of the house used for storage and sheltering livestock Mastabeh A higher residential level used for sleeping eating hospitality and storage Sida gallery Another living area above the mastaba used primarily for sleeping 2 In the second half of the 19th century a residential story characterized by a cross vault was added above the traditional house creating a space between the floor with the livestock in the bottom room and the residential story A separate entrance was installed in each story 2 Fortified houses were built outside the village core and had two stories a raised ground floor with tiny windows used for raising livestock and storage and a separate residential floor with large windows and balconies In the courtyard was a small structure used for storage Sometimes a tabun baking oven would be located inside it 2 The first modern building technology was evident in the farmhouses Iron beams were used and the roofs were made of concrete and roof tiles These structures had balconies with a view and wide doorways 2 Modern architecture and town planning editNotable architects since WWI edit nbsp Government Mint building Jerusalem designed by Austen Harrison 1935 built 1937 Sensing the political changes taking place in central Europe around the time of the First World War as well as the stirrings of Zionist ideals about the re establishment of a homeland for Jews numerous Jewish architects from around Europe emigrated to Palestine during the first three decades of the 20th century While much innovative planning occurred during the time of the British Mandatory authorities 1920 1948 in particular the town plan for Tel Aviv in 1925 by Patrick Geddes it would be architecture designed in the modernist Bauhaus style that would fill the plots of that plan among the architects who emigrated to Palestine at that time and who went on to establish formidable careers were Yehuda Magidovitch Shmuel Mestechkin 1908 2004 specialised in kibbutz architecture 3 Lucjan Korngold 1897 1963 Poland and Brazil the Rubinsky House an early Le Corbusier style building in Tel Aviv is often misattributed to him 4 5 6 Jacob Jacques Jacov Ornstein 1886 1953 Salomon Gepstein 1882 1961 Josef Neufeld 1899 1980 and Elsa Gidoni 1899 1978 nee Mandelstamm 7 Dov Karmi Zeev Rechter and Arieh Sharon were among the leading architects of the early 1950s 8 Rudolf Reuven Trostler played an important role in designing the country s early industrial buildings 8 Dora Gad designed the interiors of the Knesset the Israel Museum the country s first large hotels the Jewish National and University Library El Al planes and Zim passenger ships 9 Amnon Niv designed Moshe Aviv Tower then Israel s tallest building today it s the second tallest after the Azrieli Sarona tower David Resnick was a Brazilian born Israeli architect who won the Israel Prize in architecture 10 and the Rechter Prize for iconic Jerusalem buildings such as the Israel Goldstein Synagogue and Brigham Young University on Mount Scopus 11 12 Movie theaters edit The architecture of Tel Aviv s movie theaters can be seen as a reflection of Israeli architectural history The first cinema the Eden opened in 1914 was an example of the eclectic style that was in vogue at the time combining European and Arab traditions The Mugrabi cinema designed in 1930 was built in art deco style In the late 1930s the Esther Chen and Allenby theaters were prime examples of the Bauhaus style In the 1950s and 1960s brutalist style architecture was exemplified by the Tamar cinema built inside the historic Solel Boneh building on Tel Aviv s Allenby Street 13 Late Ottoman period edit The Templers built homes with tiled roofs like those in the German countryside dubious discuss citation needed Mandate period edit Housing built during the British Mandate was urban in character with flat roofs rectangular doorways and painted floor tiles 2 Municipal laws in Jerusalem require that all buildings be faced with local Jerusalem stone 14 The ordinance dates back to the British Mandate and the governorship of Sir Ronald Storrs 15 and was part of a master plan for the city drawn up in 1918 by Sir William McLean then city engineer of Alexandria 16 Three of the six British town planners of the time were Charles Robert Ashbee the most pro Arab and anti Zionist of them 17 Clifford Holliday and Austen Harrison another important Mandate time town planner being the German Jewish architect Richard Kaufmann nbsp Classical International Style Bauhaus architecture part of the White City UNESCO World Heritage Site The White City of Tel Aviv a collection of over 4 000 buildings from the 1930s built in a locally adapted form of the International Style has first been named the White City in 1984 and has been declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2001 citation needed State of Israel edit In the 1950s and 1960s Israel built rows of concrete tenements to accommodate the masses of new immigrants living in the temporary tents and tin shacks of the maabarot some of these were known as rakevet or train in Hebrew due to their relative monotony and length 18 From 1948 architecture in Israel was dominated by the need to house masses of new immigrants The Brutalist concrete style suited Israel s harsh climate and paucity of natural building materials 19 Today many such old buildings remain in Israeli cities Although they are being gradually remodeled as part of the TAMA 38 he program which is meant to strengthen old buildings against earthquakes or completely demolished and replaced with more modern housing projects occupying the former site as part of the pinui binui he evacuate and build program it is expected to take decades before this style of architecture completely disappears from Israel s cities 20 nbsp Azrieli Sarona Tower finished 2017 As property values have risen skyscrapers are going up around the country The Azrieli Sarona Tower in Tel Aviv is the tallest building in Israel to date 21 Ephraim Henry Pavie has evolved from organic architecture towards biomorphism 22 The Pavie House in Neve Daniel is a rare case of non geometric Neo futuristic blobitecture in Israel 23 Museums and archives editTel Aviv has three institutions dedicated to the Bauhaus or more widely the International Style the Bauhaus Center with its own gallery and offering guided city tours see homepage here the small Bauhaus Museum with original interior furnishings established in 2008 24 and the Liebling Haus center for urbanism architecture and conservation see homepage here The Munio Gitai Weinraub Museum of Architecture opened in Haifa in 2012 25 Gallery edit nbsp Old Town Hall Tel Aviv nbsp Mugrabi cinema 1930 nbsp Yad Kennedy memorial Jerusalem Forest nbsp Moshe Aviv Tower Ramat Gan nbsp The Pavie House 2011 nbsp Meier on Rothschild tower in 2013 Tel Aviv s highest residential building nbsp Shrine of the Bab built between 1949 and 1953 nbsp Latrun Monastery 1926 1953 nbsp Levin House 1924 on Rothschild Boulevard flanked by modern glass tower nbsp The three towers of the Azrieli Center 1999 See also editArchitecture of Palestine which overlaps with the architecture of Israel List of Jewish architectsReferences edit a b c Aharon Kempinski Ronny Reich 1992 The Architecture of Ancient Israel From the Prehistoric to the Persian Periods Israel Exploration Society ISBN 9652210137 a b c d e Heritage Conservation in Israel Shmuel Mestechkin at GreyScape Accessed 10 May 2021 Lucjan Korngold at GreyScape Accessed 10 May 2021 Anna Cymer Lucjan Korngold at culture pl Accessed 10 May 2021 The Rubinsky House Amnon Bar Or Tal Gazit Architects Ltd Accessed 10 May 2021 Elsa Mandelstamm Gidoni at Pioneering Women of American Architecture Accessed 10 May 2021 a b A Concrete Life Noam Dvir Haaretz Magazine October 17 2008 Dora Gad s private sanctuary Encyclopedia Judaica 2008 as quoted by Jewish Virtual Library retrieved September 13 2012 Brittain Catlin Timothy Israel Goldstein Synagogue Givat Ram campus of the Hebrew University Jerusalem Israel Heinz Rau and David Reznik Building of the Month Twentieth Century Society June 2010 retrieved September 13 2012 A mixed modernist message Noam Dvir for Haaretz 2 February 2012 Retrieved 13 September 2012 Architectural milestones Passion Set in Stone The New York Times Paul Goldberger for The New York Times 10 September 1995 Retrieved 2012 08 28 Jerusalem Architecture Since 1948 Jewishvirtuallibrary org Archived from the original on 2016 10 22 Retrieved 2012 08 28 The British Mandate from Jerusalem Life Throughout the Ages in a Holy City Online course material from the Ingeborg Rennert Center for Jerusalem Studies Bar Ilan University Ramat Gan Israel King Anthony D 2004 Spaces of global cultures architecture urbanism identity New York Routledge p 168 ISBN 0 415 19619 1 Retrieved 29 November 2021 Encyclopedia of Zionism and Israel edited by Raphael Patai Herzl Press McGraw New York 1971 Architecture and Town Planning in Israel Vol 1 pp 71 76 Sir Banister Fletcher s A History of Architecture יעברו עשרות שנים עד שבנייני הרכבת ייעלמו האם מגדל שרונה עזריאלי באמת עקום Futuristic House Biomorphism by Ephraim Henry Pavie Architects and Design Tuvie 11 July 2011 Retrieved 10 May 2021 Kanti Yonatan 2 April 2012 השראה למכירה המקרה המוזר של הבית בגוש עציון Inspiration for sale The curious case of the house in Gush Etzion Nrg Maariv in Hebrew Retrieved 10 May 2021 Hecht Esther Bauhaus Museum Opens in Tel Aviv s White City Architectural Record Retrieved 5 September 2012 Amos Gitai sets up Israel s first architecture museum in memory of his father Haaretz Further reading edit Alster Tal How Israel turned homeowners into YIMBYs Works in Progress worksinprogress co 14 Retrieved 18 February 2024 overview of TAMA 38 and pinui binui renovation programsExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Architecture of Israel JewishVirtualLibrary org Archaeology Arzaworld com Historical Architecture and Design in Israel Archived 2018 04 20 at the Wayback Machine A little modesty goes a long way Archived 2008 06 09 at the Wayback Machine by David Kroyanker Fifty Years of Israeli Architecture as Reflected in Jerusalem s Buildings Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs 26 May 1999 Israel Architect Design Architecture of Israel Quarterly Jerusalem Architecture in the late Ottoman Period by Lili Eylon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Architecture of Israel amp oldid 1212639274, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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