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Category Archives: Tel Aviv

Everything you want to know about Tel Aviv.

Tel Aviv Guide - Free Guided Walking Tours Of Tel Aviv

Fascinating free guided walking tours of Tel Aviv – Jaffa are available in English, all a year around (except from Yom Kippur). No need to book in advance – just come and enjoy!

TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY – ART AND ARCHITECTURE

Tel Aviv university-Guide for Visitors

Every Monday at 11 a.m.

Meeting point:

Dynon bookstore, university campus entrance (intersection of Haim Levanon and Einstein streets). An introduction to the Israeli architecture on campus, this tour delves into styles, international influences, stories of buildings and architects, environmental sculpture and landscape design. The tour offered in cooperation with the Friends of Tel Aviv University.

OLD JAFFA

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Every Wednesday at 9:30 a.m.

Meeting point:

Clock Tower (beginning of Yefet street), Jaffa.

The tour embraces the picturesque flea Market, archaeological sites, the view of the Tel Aviv from the Crest Garden (Gan Hapisga), and the renovated alleys and buildings of historic Old Jaffa.

BAUHAUS – THE “WHITE CITY”

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Every Saturday at 11 a.m.

Meeting point:

46 Rothschild Boulevard (corner of Shadal Street).

In July, 2003, UNESCO proclaimed the “White City”, the unique urban and historical fabric of Tel Aviv, as a World Cultural Heritage site.

The tour focuses on the architectural styles of the 1930s – most notably the international, or Bauhaus, style – in one of the White City’s main concentrations, along Rothschild Boulevard. Telling the story of Tel Aviv from its early years till today, this tour presents a wonderful opportunity to savor the experience of life, past and present, in the first Hebrew City.

Tel Aviv Sea - To Sea And To Be Seen

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Tel Aviv Has a promenade, a long promenade, running along the seashore that makes up the western edge of Tel Aviv – Jaffa. There, we walk or jog, ride bikes, sit on benches, fill out lungs with fresh air. A glorious 8.7 miles of open views, blue horizons, white sails bobbing on the waves, kitesurfers and windsurfers all around.

There’s a daytime promenade, and there’s the nighttime version. Dozens of restaurants, cafes, and ice cream parlors are busy al day long, while pubs, discos and jazz clubs blossom after dark. Regardless of the hour, human attractions abound – clowns, caricaturists, tattoo artists, hair-braiders, magicians and of course, the ever-changing parade if people strolling by the nearby beaches beckon. Clean sand, lounge chairs, ice-cream vendors and diehard beach-lovers that swim daily, winter and summer, no matter what. Each beach has its own unique character. A few tips: On the Dolphinarium beach on Friday afternoons, for instance, you can join an improvised percussion festival, and the Brazilian martial arts/dance/music combination called capoeira. Go to the Gordon beach for beach volleyball. The religiously observant will find gender-segregated swimming close to the Tel Aviv port. The gay-lesbian community will gravitate to the stretch near the Hilton, which has earned the unofficial little of Tel Aviv’s gay-friendliest beach. At the Metzitzim beach, you can let your dogs and your hormones run wild among the assembled babes and hunks. There’s a playground for kids, easy chairs and restaurant – of playground – to provide the ultimate Tel Aviv beach cuisine: cold, sweet, juicy watermelon accompanied by salty white Bulgarian cheese. The narrow strip of sand near the marina is less crowded and more peaceful; at the yacht basin, you can rent windsurfers, surfboards, sailboats, motorboats and diving equipment.

Tel Aviv’s beaches are well-equipped with changing room, showers and toilets; some have lifeguards year-round. On the beaches and the major tourist centers, tourist police provide a sense of security, as well as assistance and information services.

Tel Aviv - Jerusalem - The Differences In Photos

The Difference Between Jerusalem And Tel Aviv is amazing. It’s only about 50km separating between both cities,But the first time you are in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, you’ll feel it. This video will try to show you in photos what is waiting for you in Jerusalem, and what waiting for you in Tel Aviv.

Enjoy!

Israel Tourism - Tel Aviv-Jaffa Photos And Tour

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Thousands of years of history comer together in Jaffa, one of world’s oldest cities and the birthplace of Tel Aviv. A center of tourism, food and fun, with an exotic Levantine ambience.

Driving to Jaffa is like going through a time tunnel – skyscrapers soar on the left, while ahead lays a city with thousands of years behind it.

The main port of the ancient land of Israel, and one of the first ports in the world. Jaffa was a center of commerce and culture, agriculture and tourism, the destination of shipping lines from Alexandria and Beirut. From the Clock Tower Square, convoys of wagons and camels fanned out to all parts of the land and pilgrims made their way on foot to the holy city of Jerusalem. The clock tower built by the Turkish Sultan Abd al-Hamid the II in 1906, when the land was under Ottoman rule, has recently undergone a facelift, as has the square surrounding it. In the alley next to the Mahmuddiyah mosque, men are absorbed in endless games of backgammon, or shesh-besh, to use the local parlance. Coffeehouses offering narghiles to smoke along with tiny cups of strong black Turkish coffee create an authentic Levantine atmosphere.

The Tel Aviv – Jaffa Tourism Association offers free guided walking tours of Jaffa every Wednesday in English.

Meeting point: the Clock Tower on Yefet Street, at 9:30 a.m. No need for advance booking – just come and enjoy!

Tel Aviv Art And Culture

Tel Aviv is home to three of Israel’s largest museums, which draw a total of 1.1 million visitors a year. Among them are:

Tel Aviv Museum of Art displays modern and post-modern art. Also on display are works from the 16th-19th centuries, including the Impressionist period, as well as graphic design and photography.

Another fascinating museum is The Eretz Israel Museum. It deals with the history and culture of the land of Israel, including archaeology, anthropology, folklore, ethnography, Judaic, history and more.

Art Galleries

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Don’t miss the dozens of fine galleries, primarily located along Gordon Street and in the Old City of Jaffa, featuring the very latest in contemporary Israeli. We won’t say another word ? we’ll let the art speak for itself.

Theater

 From its early days Tel Aviv was a great theatre center. Even in this cinema and home-video era, the popularity of Tel Aviv’s theatres has not waned. Not surprisingly, 18 out of Israel’s 35 performing arts centers are located in Tel Aviv-Jaffa. Among the big theater’s are:

Habima Theater

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Locates in the Rotchild Boulevard, Tel Aviv most beautiful boulevard, is Habima Theatre. Israel’ national theater, which got its start in Moscow at the beginning of the 20th century, mounts original Hebrew plays, the classics and musicals before its thousands of subscribers and eager theatergoers.

The Cameri Theater

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The Tel Aviv Performing Arts Center (TAPAC), the stunning modern building, is home to the Cameri Theater, which produces both original Hebrew and translated plays.

Other theaters in Tel Aviv include Beit Lessin, Hasimto, Tmuna, Karov, tzavta and the Jewish-Arab Theater in Jaffa, Each one has its own, mainly post-modern, repertory.

For information about shows & performances that provide English subtitles, please check with the relevant theater.

Dance

You don’t need to speak Hebrew to be thrilled by Israeli modern dance and breathtaking percussion performances.

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Explore the avant-garde in Tel Aviv. Dance around the clock ? that’s the defining characteristic of Suzanne Dellal Centre in Neve Tzedek, Israel’s undisputed dance mecca. More than 600 dance performances are mounted each year at the centre, the most visited tourist site in Tel Aviv. Much of this is due to the worldwide popularity of Israeli dance, which has become an important export industry. Every year, Suzanne Dellal Centre hosts major international dance events such as “Dance Europa”, which place it on the cutting-edge of worldwide culture.

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One of the country’s leading companies is Batsheva, which was founded in 1964 by Baroness Batsheva de Rothschild and the legendary American choreographer Martha Graham, the high priestess of modern dance. Ohad Naharin, the company’s artistic director since 1990, has imbued Batsheva with the innovation and creative daring that has won the hearts of dance lovers at the world’s most prestigious venues and festivals. Batsheva, whose home is in the Suzanne Dellal Centre, performs more than 250 times a year in Israel and abroad.

The Israeli Opera

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The Tel Aviv Performing Arts Center (TAPAC), is bursting with jazz, opera, dance, theater, you name it.

The stunning modern building is home to the Cameri Theater, which produces both original Hebrew and translated plays.

TAPAC is also home to the New Israeli Opera, a cultural enterprise, born of one man’s vision and passion. In Moscow in 1917, conductor Mordechai Golinkin envisioned an opera theater in the land of Israel. Six years later, he mounted a performance of Verdi’s La traviata in the young city that sprang up from the sand dunes, but the opera had no home.

Today, the New Israeli Opera is flourishing, with more than 18,000 subscripts, and a steadily growing audience for the eight operas it mounts each year.

The Philharmonic Orchestra

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It all starts with a crazy idea and someone passionate enough to make it come true. Thus came into being the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra.

1936. Jews, fearing that Europe is going up in flames, pack their suitcases and flee. The legendary Polish-Jewish violinist Bronislaw Huberman persuaded musicians from Europe’s greatest orchestras to come to Tel Aviv, where he founded the Philharmonic Orchestra. So it’s no wonder that the great Arturo Toscanini conducted the orchestra’s debut concert, that Zubin Mehta has been its music director since 1969, that Leonard Bernstein conducted many times and that Kurt Masur is its honorary guest conductor. This international spirit has characterized the Israel Philharmonic for more than 70 years: bringing together top musicians from all over the world, the orchestra has toured five continents and consistently reaps the highest praise, both at home and abroad.

Tel Aviv Port

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70 years after its establishment, Tel Aviv’s Port became the city’s premier entertainment center, with dance clubs, cafes, and restaurants at the waters edge and great shops featuring the work of Israeli designers. The port attracts to its wide wooden promenade thousands of people seeking to combine food, shopping and entertainment with romantic red sunsets, salty sea breezes and white sails on the horizon. If you get here after noontime on a Saturday, forget it - you’ll quickly discover that you’re not the only one in pursuit of this magical combination.

A bridge across the Yarkon River connects the port to the historic old Reading power station, whose cavernous interior now serves as an exiting venue for post-modem design and art exhibitions. Near the bridge is a foot and bicycle path called the Yarkon Promenade that heads east along the banks of the river into the Yarkon National Park ? 875 acres of greenery, water, playing fields and leisure activities for the whole family.

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