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Restoration of the Pera Palace Hotel

1 August, 2010 (11:53) | istanbul, News from Istanbul |

pera-palace-hotel-istanbul

The Pera Palace Hotel in Istanbul

The restoration of the Pera Palace Hotel in Istanbul has finally been completed and re-assumes its role as one of the great hotels of Istanbul.  Seeped in history with echoes and imprints of some of the most interesting personalities of 20th century history, it can now take back its old glory in modern day Istanbul.

I remember visiting and sitting in the dining room of the Pera Palace Hotel before the renovations began.  A porter had taken me upstairs to show me the rooms.  Even then, before the restorations began, it was still a glorious hotel.  I bought a lovely little cigarette case with this faded old photograph of the Pera Palace on its front while I was at the Hotel.  I was reminded of the Pera Palas Hotel when I read this article by Christopher Torchia.

ISTANBUL — “It was the last stop on the Orient Express, a grand hotel with Istanbul’s first electric elevator where artists and aristocrats sipped champagne beneath chandeliers as the Ottoman Empire dissolved and the world drifted toward war.

Mata Hari, accused of spying and executed in France in 1917, stayed at the Pera Palace Hotel. So did Greta Garbo, who played the shadowy dancer in a 1931 movie. Ernest Hemingway checked in to report on war between Turks and Greeks. Agatha Christie is said to have crafted “Murder on the Orient Express” in Room 411.

Then, like the empire it outlived, the hotel slid into decay.

On Sept. 1, the state-owned Pera Palace will reopen after a two-year restoration that cost 23 million euros ($30 million), seeking to capture the lost sparkle of what was one of Istanbul’s most prominent landmarks. It is no longer the lone luxury hotel on a hill above the Golden Horn inlet. The former Ottoman capital teems with high-end accommodation, some in restored imperial mansions along the Bosporus Strait that divides the Asian and European continents.

Pinar Kartal Timer, general manager of the Pera Palace, believes fabled guests of the past will bestow new glory on the hotel, which held its opening ball in 1895.

“These people have left their traces in this hotel,” Timer said in an interview in the 115-room hotel Wednesday. Major structural work and painting was complete, but the old ballroom was empty and the mother-of-pearl bookshelves had not been installed. Workers hammered, and layers of cardboard and plastic covered some balustrades and marble-floored passageways.

The Pera Palace mirrors the revival of the surrounding Beyoglu area, historically known as Pera, which comes from the Greek word for “beyond.” It was nicknamed “Little Europe” in the late 19th century, an enclave of Greek and Armenian entrepreneurs, along with European diplomats and businessmen who imported luxury goods from capitals to the west.

Many local residents fled deadly unrest or moved to outlying areas, leaving neglected stone facades to brood in the narrow, trash-filled streets. In the last decade, shops and restaurants flooded the central neighborhood as economic fortunes and pride in Istanbul’s heritage blossomed.

Mehmet Karaoren is a partner in an architectural firm that snapped up a dozen Pera buildings, restoring them and selling or renting the refitted apartments. In some years, the prices of their properties have doubled.

“In the beginning, this was a game for us. It became a business,” said Karaoren, who sought inspiration for his restorations during travels to Paris, London and New York City.

A commission linked to Turkey’s Culture Ministry bars changes that would taint the historical integrity of a structure, though allowances are made for reinforcement against earthquakes and the installation of elevators in tall buildings with dimly lit, winding staircases.

Business interests and a lack of political will have sometimes trumped the work of conservationists. Istanbul, home to relics and monuments from the Roman, Byzantine and Ottoman empires, is at risk of being placed on a list of endangered cultural treasures by UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee. That would be a serious embarrassment since the European Union designated the city as its “cultural capital” this year.

David Michelmore, an international conservationist, said unrestored sections of old Pera were at risk of demolition, and he compared the area to London’s Notting Hill district in the 1960s, a shabby area before its successful rehabilitation.

“It’s not tourists mostly, it’s Turkish people who are going there,” Michelmore said. “Historic centers have a huge capacity for serving purposes of recreation and relaxation.”

The original owner of the Pera Palace was Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits, which operated the Orient Express luxury train line. A Turkish conglomerate, the Besiktas Group, now manages the hotel. It has a modern spa and an indoor pool, as well as new elevators to supplement the original wood and cast iron one.

The building is a mix of styles distinctive to 19th century Istanbul — neo-classical, art nouveau and oriental. Rooms have handwoven carpets and antique furniture mixed with the new. Sixteen are suites named after guests including Britain’s King Edward VIII and Austro-Hungarian Emperor Franz Joseph I.

Basic room prices start at 185 euros ($240), excluding tax and breakfast, but go higher in peak season. Ahead of the September opening, they are 265 euros ($350).

Nobody will sleep in Room 101. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, a former army officer who founded Turkey in 1923, once used it as a base. The room will house a museum of items belonging to Ataturk, including hats, slippers and dignitaries’ gifts.
The hotel hosted spies as well as statesmen. Kim Philby, the British-Soviet double agent, was nearly unmasked in Istanbul, and the agent codenamed Cicero, valet to the British ambassador in Ankara, visited as he sold secret documents to German agents in World War II.

A witness to tumult, the Pera Palace became a target in 1941 when a bomb exploded at the entrance shortly after the arrival of a British diplomatic party from Bulgaria, which had sided with the Nazis. Several people died.

Hemingway drank at the hotel’s Orient Bar in the early 1920s. In his story, “The Snows of Kilimanjaro,” the main character, a writer, recalls a brawl over a woman with a British soldier in Istanbul. He slept with the woman that night:
“…and he left her before she was awake looking blousy enough in the first daylight and turned up at the Pera Palace with a black eye, carrying his coat because one sleeve was missing.”

From the Associated Press

Internet censorship in Turkey

18 July, 2010 (11:43) | human rights, News from Istanbul |

internet censorship in turkeyIt’s pretty pathetic that Turkey still censors the internet, banning YouTube or anything else for that matter. A true democracy allows people to decide for themselves what they themselves want to watch or read. If one does not want to watch or read something, the individual should decide for themselves. In this news article on Turkey, it states that some 5,000 internet sites are banned. How ridiculous! Just like China and its internet censorship.  Now it seems that protesters in Istanbul, some 2,000 of them are out in the streets protesting against internet censorship. Granted, my place of employment bans YouTube but that’s because if they didn’t, we’d all be watching amusing videos all day on YouTube and not doing any work. But we still have the choice, if we want, when at home, or from an iPhone or at an internet café to watch YouTube videos all day and all night long if we have the time. This is the modern world.

“ISTANBUL: Over 2,000 protesters marched in Turkey’s largest city Istanbul against strict internet censorship in the country.

The protesters were demanding that a law preventing access to over 5,000 internet sites banned in Turkey be repealed.

They chanted slogans Saturday for removing the ban on video-sharing website YouTube and against the transportation minister, whose ministry is responsible for website bans, Xinhua reported.

“Don’t touch the internet, pull away your hand,” the protesters shouted.

The protest was organised by the Common Platform Against Internet Censorship, a platform of over 50 non-governmental organisations.

There was always dissatisfaction with internet censorship, but this was the first time people poured out into the streets, Ozgur Uckan of Bilgi University, one of the organisers of the rally, said.

There are about 30 million internet users in Turkey, which has a total population of 70 million.”

News Source

Istanbul Asks for Help to Avoid UNESCO Delisting

8 July, 2010 (10:44) | News from Istanbul |

Update for the news regarding UNESCO threat to remove Istanbul from World Heritage Site list.  One could say, it is time to take care of beautiful Istanbul.  Do not abandon her.  The following story comes from the Hurriyet Daily News.

“Following a series municipal developments that have endangered Istanbul’s cultural heritage, UNESCO has threatened to de-list the city if it does not rapidly implement a number of amendments to reverse its current policies. While some academics say Istanbul is no longer able to look after itself, others argue the world body has abandoned the metropolis With Istanbul in danger of being removed from UNESCO’s list of world heritage sites, a local nongovernmental organization has begun a campaign to ensure the city does not lose its special status.

The World Heritage Committee has given the city a list of amendments it must implement in order to protect the cultural heritage of the city ahead of its 34th annual meeting, which will take place from July 25 to Aug. 3 in Brazil. If the required amendments are not fulfilled by the time the annual meeting starts within the next three weeks, then the committee will consider Istanbul an endangered cultural heritage site.

In response to the threat of de-listing, the Istanbul Urban Movement has begun a signature campaign at http://istanbulsos.wordpress.com, to continue with various activities to create social awareness in the hopes of preventing a UNESCO verdict against Istanbul.

The UNESCO committee is asking for amendments on the metro bridge construction over the Golden Horn, the renovation of Istanbul’s city walls, the Marmaray project, an undersea rail tunnel that will link the European and Anatolian sides of the city, a protection plan for the traditional wooden houses of Istanbul and a master plan to relieve the traffic burden on the historical peninsula.

The civil society group held a meeting at the Mimar Sinan University Architecture Faculty on Monday and discussed its action plan.

Speaking at the meeting, Zeynep Ahunbay, a professor at the renovation department of Istanbul Technical University’s Architecture Faculty, said the threat was not new but has been constant since 2004.

“UNESCO warned Turkey about the evident risks and asked it to pay attention to the preservation of universal wealth in Istanbul,” she said. “However, what has been done in the name of amelioration is way beneath what’s necessary.”

Ahunbay said UNESCO asked the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality last year to revise its plans about the Golden Horn metro bridge and to show diligence to prevent the detrimental effects on the historical peninsula’s landscape.

“UNESCO’s permission and opinion is asked for projects that might possibly affect world heritage areas,” Ahunbay said. “For the Golden Horn metro bridge, this procedure was skipped, and there has not been a serious effort to fix the situation, even after UNESCO learned about it.”

Ahunbay said the stanchions for the bridge were reportedly shortened to 55 meters from 65 in line with the warnings, “but, in the end, UNESCO said as long as the construction continues, Istanbul will be removed from the World Heritage List in 2011.”
Speaking to the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review about the recent developments, Murat Belge, an English literature professor at Istanbul Bilgi University and an author of many books about historical Istanbul, said the risk has long lingered over Istanbul like the sword of Damocles.
He also said the UNESCO threat was not the first warning but probably the last.

Quoting Turgut Cansever, the famous late architect who won many awards and had spoken on a previous panel about the same issue, Belge likened UNESCO’s position to social services.

“When parents abuse their children in some way or cannot take care of them due to, say, financial issues, social services takes the children away from them,” he said. “Similarly, we cannot take care of Istanbul, and they are invalidating our rights to the city.”

Belge said Istanbul’s presence on the list is a result of a mutual agreement which stipulates “that if one party is not following the terms of the agreement, the other party has the right to annul the agreement altogether.”

The academic also said the officials wanted this to happen, because if Istanbul is finally removed from the list, they would be free to act in whatever fashion they chose.

“That is what they are after,” Belge said. “And I have no hope that we will be able to prevent it from happening.”

On the other hand, İlber Ortaylı, a prominent historian and the head of Topkapı Museum, blamed UNESCO for leaving Istanbul alone in its degradation.

“Would you call an antique vase worthless just because your worthless cousin inherited it from your great grandmother?” Ortaylı asked.
The historian said he found the likely decision “extremely foolish.” “Istanbul is being tarnished and destroyed. We do not want this to happen, either. We are trying everything we can to prevent it from happening. They are leaving us alone rather than giving us better support.”

Ortaylı blamed UNESCO for applying double standards, referring to the damage caused in Vietnam and Iraq during the wars waged by the U.S., saying: “No sanctions were applied on them. UNESCO is hypocritical in its punishment mechanism.”
UNESCO has further represented no material benefits for Turkey and functions only as a threat mechanism, he said. “Now that mechanism is out of service as well.”

If historical wealth belonging to all of humanity cannot be protected by its inhabitants due to a lack of funds or a lack of awareness, the residents should be given more support rather than being abandoned, according to Ortaylı.

“UNESCO is to be condemned as well in what is going to happen to Istanbul in the future,” the historian said.

In a previous article concerning the possible UNESCO decision published in the Daily News on June 25, Francesco Bandarin, the director of UNESCO’s World Heritage Center was quoted as saying: “We will wait and see. The decision will be public soon.”

I don’t sign many petitions but I signed the one at http://istanbulsos.wordpress.com to voice my opinion. If you love Istanbul, go to the Istanbul Urban Movement site and voice your opinion too.
Source:

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