The story of Tel Aviv through changing architectural styles: How, when, and why was it built? When did the housing crisis in the city begin, and how was it addressed? What is the connection between architecture and ideology?
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From the historic core of “Little Tel Aviv,” the Neve Tzedek Museum and the Nahum Gutman Museum, the Pansky Passage and Suzanne Dellal, to the Station Complex—a call for preservation and renewal on a human scale.
€150.00
Why is Tel Aviv called the White City? A lighthearted, exciting, yet historical tour. We will see the most prominent buildings of the International Style (Bauhaus) and hear about the architects who designed them.
Architectural tour around Dizengoff Square – a journey following the Geddes plan, architect Genia Averbuch, the influence of the Bauhaus school, building preservation, boutique hotels and the Arik Einstein Center.
The tour of the Rothschild Center examines the tension between preserving eclectic and international buildings and the construction of new towers in the historic heart of Tel Aviv.
A tour of Bialik Street following the early days of Tel Aviv, between eclectic and international style, preservation and renewal, including a visit to the Bialik Museum for an additional fee.
A tour in the footsteps of Yehuda Magidovich, Tel Aviv's first city engineer: villas, hotels and residences from the 1920s and 1930s, between eclectic and modern styles.
A walking tour between the sea, the city's first streets, and its surprising alleys, accompanied by entertaining stories. We will learn about spectacular European architecture, combined with stories of love, drama, and culture.
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