HaYarkon 96

HaYarkon 96 is a building of nine floors in Tel Aviv, Israel, of which its penthouse is considered to be the most expensive in the country.[1] The building was built by entrepreneurs Shlomo Grofman (former chairman of Africa-Israel) and Zalman Shoval (formerly Israeli US ambassador). The building became a Tel Aviv and world icon due to its special architecture.

HaYarkon 96
הירקון 96
Location within Israel
General information
StatusComplete
TypeApartments
AddressHaYarkon 96
Town or cityTel Aviv
Country Israel
Coordinates32.078761°N 34.767794°E / 32.078761; 34.767794
Construction started2008 (original building, 1935)
Opening2012
OwnerShlomo Grofman and Zalman Shoval
Design and construction
ArchitectGidi Bar Orayen
Other designersAmnon Bar Or (preservation architect)
Website
Official website

History

HaYarkon 96 is a historic Bauhaus building. Combining an ultra modern tower, it is located in HaYarkon Street in Tel Aviv. The building is a composition of old and new, art and real estate.

The original building was constructed in 1935 by architect Pinchas Bieżoński (1885–1992), shaped like a "ח" surrounding a long front yard. One of the entrepreneurs, Zalman Shoval, and his family, lived there themselves between 1940 and the 1970s. An earlier residence was France's general counsel. Later on its residents were the Chop family whose identification with Palmach resulted in hiding there Yigal Alon from the British who used to gather in the nearby club.

In 2012, the building was re-launched after a careful reconstruction, and received an addition in the center of its head, nine floors high. These floors, in a goal to reach historic Israeli innovation, made up a new luxury tower with 45 apartments, spreading in two parts. The project's bottom and front part is combined of two timely Bauhaus buildings that was reconstructed from scratch, while keeping their front. Combined above them is a new luxury building of 9 floors.

The 400-meter lobby, which is one of Israel's most luxurious ones, hosts an art show with a changeable dynamics of Israeli artists.[2]

References

  1. Tsur, Shlomit (2013-06-17). "Israel's luxury home market stagnating". Globes. Retrieved 2013-09-30.
  2. Keshet, Rosenblum (2013-09-15). "Adding cultural value to Israel's pricey real estate". Haaretz. Retrieved 2013-10-02.
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