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Talk:Architecture of Israel

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The most idiotic article on Israeli topics so far

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Avoiding to give a definition. What is ISRAELI architecture? When does it start? 19th century? With Hurva? (Designed by a Turk.) Tiferet Israel? (Probably designed by a Russo-German.) Mea Shearim? (Designed by a German.) Is the architecture of Mandate Palestine part of it? If yes to both questions: how then is it demarcated from the architecture of Palestine, Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt from those periods? Or isn't it?

Is it only architecture designed by Jews who lived past the 1948 moment?

Jewish architects from Tel Aviv were expelled to Damascus & elsewhere during WWI and they have built there. Where do you put that work?

Barluzzi has worked in E & W Jerusalem, on Mt Tabor, but also in Transjordan, Bethlehem, Bet Jala etc.

What do we do with the "eclectic style" architects (our term) who strove to create an "Eretz Israeli style" including Oriental elements, some ancient, but also contemporary ones?

There are International Style buildings from the 30s and 40s, identical in style to those of today's Israel, but standing in Bethlehem, Jericho, Amman.

What is the (Lehi-bombed) town hall of Jaffa, designed by a Jew for a majority-Arab town in Ottoman Palestine?

What is the Palace Hotel (now Waldorf) in Jerusalem? The same as King David Hotel a few 100m away, or not? Both had a mix of Arab & Jewish financiers, owners, construction teams, from architect to chief engineer to construction company. What are the Arab buildings of Baka in Jerusalem and those of the Jewish-Israeli artists colony in Jaffa? Did Ottoman and Arab stone-built city houses have no impact on architecture in Israel? Jewish Israelis love to owe and live in them, but Israeli architects don't take inspiration from the "foreign element"?

DEFINITION FIRST! Then we can fight over how well, or logical, or meaningful it's formulated. As of now, we may as well erase the whole article. And the Architecture of Palestine article together with it. And then start from scratch, working at both in parallel. Arminden (talk) 06:19, 8 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]

A few notes, recycling removed material:

  • Definition first and foremost. What is the architecture 'of Israel', the sum of all structures standing there? What is by contrast the 'ISRAELI' architecture?
  • Ottoman Tanzimat period: representative architecture.
  • The Templers introduced modern industrial buildings, hotels, farms and representative community halls, shops and workshops, etc. Not just "homes with tiled roofs like those in the German countryside". They also went with the time, adopting the latest architectural style (see Sarona).
  • Templer rural housing as an influence on kibbutz architecture.
  • Kibbutz (and moshav) architecture altogether: some of the best architects contributed or fully dedicated themselves to it. Ideology-driven, modular principle allowing for flexibility.
  • Are very old buildings part of "the architecture of Israel"? See buildings (mainly ruins, with very few standing structures) from the Byzantine, Early Islamic, Crusader, Ayyubid, Mamluk, and Early Ottoman period.
  • Architecture evolves in a certain space, and the 1948 Green Line didn't represent a natural partition, Jerusalem definitely didn't develop separate styles until 1948 in its eastern & western parts.
  • Orientalism in the "eclectic" days of Zionist settlement. What kind of Orientalism? Accepted influence from biblical Temple descriptions, Western concept of Egyptian and Mesopotamian styles, not so by local Arab style.
  • Change of paradigm driven by immigration, economy, international evolution, other factors.
  • Arab housing: the loss of tradition, and what elements can still be recognised.
  • The dominance of Moshe Safdie in national and other important projects.
  • Imaginative thinking vs hyper-capitalistic development (see Safdie's evolution).
  • The "old" moth-balled and preserved as house-sized museum pieces; Zionist narrative.
  • Niche architecture: adobe & ecological (workshops, Neo-hippie lifestyle), unusual individual architects.
  • Ecology, climate crisis. Arminden (talk) 00:22, 11 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]