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Tel Aviv - Wikipedia

  
Article on sports, culture, history, transportation, and origin of the name Tel Aviv.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tel_Aviv

Tel Aviv travel guide - Wikitravel

  
Open source travel guide to Tel Aviv, featuring up-to-date information on ... North - The wealthiest district of Tel Aviv and one of the wealthiest in entire ...
http://wikitravel.org/en/Tel_Aviv

City of Tel-Aviv-Yafo

  
Official Tel Aviv - Yafo municipal site. Includes city vision, tourist information, traffic, virtual tours, and Tel Aviv family section. Also in Hebrew, Russian, and Arabic.
http://www.tel-aviv.gov.il/english/home.asp

Welcome to Tel-Aviv/Yafo New Site

  
Tourist Sites ...
http://www.tel-aviv.gov.il/English/Tourism/Sites/Index.htm

Tel Aviv Travel and Tourism Guide Tel Aviv Hotels Israel - inisrael.com

  
Includes a photo gallery, events, weather report, newsletter, tourism, and more about Tel Aviv.
http://www.inisrael.com/tour/telaviv/

Tel Aviv: Weather from Answers.com

  
Tel Aviv–Yafo or Tel Aviv–Jaffa A city of west-central Israel on the Mediterranean Sea west-northwest of Jerusalem ... Tel Aviv was founded in 1909 and was the ...
http://www.answers.com/topic/tel-aviv

Tel Aviv, Israel - Tel Aviv Travel, Tourism and Vacation Reviews ...

  
Tel Aviv vacations: Visit TripAdvisor, your source for the web's best reviews and travel articles about tourism and vacation packages in Tel Aviv, Israel.
http://www.tripadvisor.com/Tourism-g293984-Tel_Aviv-Vacations.html

Akhlah: Cities & Sites in Israel - Tel Aviv & Jaffa

  
Tel Aviv, the first all-Jewish city in modern times, was founded in 1909 as a ... In 1934 Tel Aviv was granted municipal status, and in 1950 it was merged with ...
http://www.akhlah.com/israel/cities/telaviv.php

Tel Aviv Restaurants: Read Tel Aviv Restaurant Reviews - TripAdvisor

  
Restaurants in Tel Aviv: See 1,517 traveler reviews, recommendations, and candid photos for 202 Tel Aviv restaurants at TripAdvisor.
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Virtual Israel Experience: Tel Aviv/Jaffa

  
Explores the history of the city.
http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/vie/Telaviv.html
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 Questions 'n' Answers about 'Tel Aviv' Opens New Window.

Q.How is the atmospher in Haifa and Tel aviv different?Related Search:
Israel
 How is the atmospher in Haifa and Tel aviv differ from one in a western city for example? When i say western city i mean one in the "west" like europe or USA you know.
A.I guarantee that if I picked you up, & took you to Tel Aviv without telling you where you were going, and dropped you in the centre - apart from the obvious giveaway of the signs in Hebrew!- you would have absolutely no idea that you weren't in a big city in any other in the developed world. You would see signs in English for all major Global players such as Intel, Cisco, Mango, Zara, Honda, Mitsubishi, Mazda, Hewlett Packard - I could go on! The main differencebetween Tel Aviv & London, is that the atmosphere is more relaxed - very few suits & ties! The centre of Tel Aviv is cleaner, and there are fewer 19th century buildings. And of course, it's by the Med - so you can walk out of your office & sit on the (very much cleaner than the Thames estuary) beach at lunch time!! There are museums and art galleries and theatres. As Israel's second City (after the capital Jerusalem), I'd say it is infinitly more pleasant than the UK's second city of Birmingham. Haifa is my worst nightmare. I suffer from vertigo when I'm there & invariably get lost, due to the construction of the city in the Carmel mountains. It's an industrial port city, so I suppose a comparison with Liverpool would be about right. There are more buildings from the time of British rule in the area, which are falling into disrepair, & parking is dreadful.
  

Q.Is there a good value and safe way to travel from Tel Aviv to Cairo or Hurghada?Related Search:
Egypt
 I will be in Tel Aviv and would like to see Cairo and Hurghada. I have a plane leaving from Hurghada so will need to be there. I will have about 8 days all up after I leave Tel Aviv and would like to spend a few days relaxing in Hurghada.
A.Many solutions: 1- Many travel centers in Tel Aviv are offering land travel by BUS to Sharm and Hirghada 2- By car, just rent a car, and go to Ilat, and from there u can cross border to Taba, which is 300 KM to Sharrm, or 500KM to Hurghada 3- the easiest way :fly from tel aviv to hur direct by airsinai travel (less than 300$ round trip) or take plane to cairo (same price) and then move to hurghada by bus less than 40$ RT
  

Q.Can you travel overland from Tel Aviv to Eilat by public transport? How long would it take?Related Search:
Israel
 I may be in Tel Aviv in October and thought it would be interesting to see the Negev Desert and Red Sea. Also interested to know if you can get to Masada by public transport. I would be thankful for any advice.
A.Tel Aviv to Eilat, yep easy get on a coach at the central bus terminal in Tel Aviv Masada, go to Tel aviv central bus station catch bus to Jerusalem central bus station take a bus from here to Masada, get the earliest bus you can it gets really hot as its on the dead sea, think there may be a cable car if not you've got a hours climb or so up the snake pass. Always take a large bottle of water with you and at least 2 for the climb of Masada,
  

Q.Where to find beagle puppies for sale in Tel Aviv?Related Search:
Dogs
 My family is moving to Tel Aviv soon, and we're looking for beagle puppies. Is there any dog breeders or pet shops around the area? I can't seem to find anything useful online. Thanks. We're looking for beagle breeders or pet shop in Tel Aviv. Thanks!
A.the only thing I can suggest is for you to start here [Link]  Good luck on your move and puppy search
  

Q.What are some Holocaust museums that tourists can visit in Tel Aviv?Related Search:
Israel
 What all information do they provide there? Will they deny me entry into Tel Aviv because I am not a jew?
A.I advise you to stay away from places like that son. Being a holocost victim is not something to brag about. These folks did not fight the nazis during ww2. maybe they were too busy counting their Deutch Marks instead of grabbing a gun and fight like we the American folks did back then. Just think for a second if every American did the same and hide like a rat instead of going to war, we'd all speak the german language right now. However you might wanna wait a little longer and then visit the Palestinian holocost museum. At least these folks did fight the Nazis, so it's ok I guess to pay $50 bucks admission fee. Thomás
  

Q.What is the cheapest possible ticket to Tel Aviv from NY?Related Search:
Israel
 What is the absolute cheapest price I could hope to get on a round trip ticket from NY to Tel Aviv and back? I've been looking at El Al's site and the cheapest I saw was 900 something. Does it ever go lower than that? Is there any other way to get a better deal?
A.With taxes a round trip ticket from JFK is around $1,100 with one stop in London. This was the best price I found going through British Airways. Ticket was only 400 or so, taxes over 600 El Al direct flight no stops around $2500 Good Luck
  

Q.What is the distance between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem?Related Search:
Israel
 How long would it take to drive from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem? And is there a flight from Tel Aviv, landing in Jerusalem? If anyone of this is obviously not possible, forgive my ignorance, I really don't know much about this region :) Google maps, DUH. Sorry it's been a long day :P
A.70.1 km – about 53 mins
  
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Tel Aviv

Tel Aviv at dusk, taken from Tel Aviv University, September 2005

Emblem of Tel Aviv
Hebrew תֵּל־אָבִיב-יָפוֹ
Name meaning Spring Hill
Founded in 1909
Government City
District Tel Aviv
Population 390,100[1]
Metropolitan Area: 3,150,800 (2008)
Jurisdiction 51,788 dunams (51.788 km2; 19.995 sq mi)
Mayor Ron Huldai
Website www.tel-aviv.gov.il
Tel Aviv within the Tel Aviv District

Tel Aviv-Yafo (Hebrew: תֵּל־אָבִיב-יָפוֹ; Arabic: تل أبيب‎, Tal ʾAbīb)[2], usually Tel Aviv, is the second-largest city in Israel, with an estimated population of 390,100.[1] The city is situated on the Israeli Mediterranean coastline, with a land area of 51.8 square kilometres (20.0 sq mi). It is the largest and most populous city in the metropolitan area of Gush Dan, home to 3.15 million people as of 2008.[3] The city is governed by the Tel Aviv-Yafo municipality, headed by Ron Huldai.[4]

Tel Aviv was founded in 1909 on the outskirts of the ancient port city of Jaffa (Hebrew: יָפוֹ‎, Yafo; Arabic: يافا‎, Yaffa). The growth of Tel Aviv soon outpaced Jaffa, which was largely Arab at the time. Tel Aviv and Jaffa were merged into a single municipality in 1950, two years after the establishment of the State of Israel. Tel Aviv's White City, designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2003, comprises the world's largest concentration of Modernist-style buildings.[5][6][7]

Tel Aviv is Israel's economic hub, home of the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange and many corporate offices and research and development centers.[8] Its beaches, cafés, upscale shopping and secular lifestyle have made it a popular tourist destination.[9] It is the country's cultural capital and a major performing arts center.[10] According to 2005 estimates, the Tel Aviv-Jaffa urban area is the Middle East's second biggest city economy,[1] and is 52nd in the world's list of cities by GDP. In the 2008 Mercer cost of living survey, Tel Aviv was ranked as the most expensive city in the Middle East and the 14th most expensive in the world.[11]

Contents

Etymology

The name Tel Aviv (literally "Hill of Spring") was chosen in 1910 from many suggestions, among them "Herzliya". Tel Aviv is the Hebrew title of Theodor Herzl's book Altneuland ("Old New Land"), translated from German by Nahum Sokolow. Sokolow took the name from the Book of Ezekiel: "Then I came to them of the captivity at Tel Aviv, that lived by the river Chebar, and to where they lived; and I sat there overwhelmed among them seven days."[12] This name was found fitting as it embraced the idea of the renaissance of the ancient Jewish homeland. Aviv is Hebrew for "spring", symbolizing renewal, and tel is an archaeological site that reveals layers of civilization built one over the other.[13] Theories vary about the etymology of Jaffa or Yafo in Hebrew. Some believe that the name derives from yafah or yofi, Hebrew for "beautiful" or "beauty". Another tradition is that Japheth, son of Noah, founded the city and that it was named for him.

History

Jaffa

Further information: Jaffa
The ancient port of Jaffa

Jaffa is an ancient port and has changed hands many times in the course of history. A series of archeological excavations, between 1955 and 1974, revealed traces of towers and gates from the Middle Bronze Age.[14] Subsequent excavations, from 1997 onwards, helped date earlier discoveries.[14] They also exposed sections of a packed-sandstone glacis and a "massive brick wall", dating from the Late Bronze Age as well as a temple "attributed to the Sea Peoples" and dwellings from the Iron Age.[14] Remnants of buildings from the Persian, Hellenistic and Pharaonic periods were also discovered.[14]

The city is first mentioned in letters from 1470 BCE that record its conquest by Egyptian Pharaoh Thutmose III.[7] Jaffa is mentioned several times in the Bible, as the port from which Jonah set sail for Tarshish;[15] as bordering on the territory of the Tribe of Dan;[16] and as the port at which the wood for Solomon's Temple in Jerusalem arrived from Lebanon.[17]

In 1099, the Christian armies of the First Crusade, led by Godfrey of Bouillon occupied Jaffa, which had been abandoned by the Muslims, fortified the town and improved its harbor.[18] As the County of Jaffa, the town soon become important as the main sea supply route for the Kingdom of Jerusalem.[19] Jaffa was captured by Saladin in 1192 but swiftly re-taken by Richard Coeur de Lion, who added to its defenses.[20] In 1223, Emperor Frederick II added further fortications.[20] Crusader domination ended in 1268, when the Mamluk Sultan Baibars captured the town, destroyed its harbor and razed its fortifications.[20][21] To prevent further Crusader incursions, the city was ransacked in 1336, 1344 and 1346 by Nasir al-Din Muhammad.[22] In the 16th century, Jaffa was conquered by the Ottomans and was administered as a village in the sanjak of Gaza.[21] According to some sources it has been a port for at least 4,000 years,[23] Napoleon besieged the city in 1799 and killed scores of inhabitants; a plague epidemic followed, decimating the remaining population.[21]

Jaffa began to grow as an urban center in the early 18th century, when the Ottoman government in Constantinople intervened to guard the port and reduce attacks by Bedouins and pirates.[21] However, the real expansion came during the 19th century, when the population grew from 2,500 in 1806 to 17,000 in 1886.[7]

Tel Aviv was founded on land purchased from Bedouins north of Jaffa. This photograph is of the 1909 auction of the first lots.

From 1800 to 1870, Jaffa was surrounded by walls and towers, which were torn down to allow for expansion as security improved.[24] The sea wall, 2.5 metres (8.2 ft) high, remained intact until the 1930s, when it was built over during a renovation of the port by the British Mandatory authorities.[24] During the mid-19th century, the city grew prosperous from trade, especially of silk and Jaffa oranges, with Europe.[7] In the 1860s Jaffa's small Sephardic community was joined by Jews from Morocco and small numbers of European Ashkenazi Jews, making by 1882 a total Jewish population of more than 1,500.[7]

During the 1880s, Ashkenazi immigration to Jaffa increased with the onset of the First Aliyah. The new arrivals were motivated more by Zionism than religion and came to farm the land and engage in productive labor.[7] In keeping with their pioneer ideology, some chose to settle in the sand dunes north of Jaffa.[7] The beginning of modern-day Tel Aviv is marked by the construction of Neve Tzedek, a neighborhood built by Ashkenazi settlers between 1887 and 1896.[5]

Urban development

Early Tel Aviv

The Second Aliyah led to further expansion.[7] In 1906, a group of Jews, among them residents of Jaffa, banded together to build a new garden suburb on the outskirts of Jaffa.[25] The goal of the Ahuzat Bayit (lit. "homestead") society was to build a "Hebrew urban centre in a healthy environment, planned according to the rules of aesthetics and modern hygiene".[7] In 1908, the group purchased 5 hectares (12 acres) of dunes northeast of Jaffa which were divided into 60 plots. Meir Dizengoff, who later became Tel Aviv's first mayor, was a member of Ahuzat Bayit.[26][27] His vision for Tel Aviv involved peaceful co-existence with the Arabs.[7]

Worker carrying bricks in Tel Aviv, 1920-1930

Another housing society, Nahalat Binyamin, began to build on April 11, 1909, after holding a lottery to divide up the land.[25] Within a year, Herzl, Ahad Ha'am, Yehuda Halevi, Lilienblum, and Rothschild streets were built; a water system was installed; and 66 houses (including some on six subdivided plots) were completed.[25] At the end of Herzl Street, a plot was allocated for a new building for the Herzliya Hebrew High School, founded in Jaffa in 1906.[25] On May 21, 1910, the name Tel Aviv was adopted.[25] Tel Aviv was planned as a European-style garden suburb of Jaffa, with wide streets and boulevards.[28]

By 1914, Tel Aviv had grown to include more than 100 hectares (247 acres), including several new neighborhoods.[25] However, growth halted in 1917 when the Ottoman authorities expelled the Jews of Jaffa.[25] A report published in The New York Times by United States Consul Garrels in Alexandria, Egypt described the Jaffa deportation of early April 1917. The orders of evacuation were aimed chiefly at the Jewish population.[29]

Under the British Mandate

Evening hours at Rothschild Boulevard, one of Tel Aviv's historic streets

Under British administration, the political friction between Jews and Arabs in Palestine increased.
On May 1, 1921, the Jaffa Riots erupted and an Arab mob killed dozens of Jewish residents. In the wake of this violence, many Jews left Jaffa for Tel Aviv, increasing the population of Tel Aviv from 2,000 in 1920 to 34,000 by 1925.[5][1] New businesses opened in Tel Aviv, leading to the decline of Jaffa as a commercial center.[25] In 1925, Patrick Geddes drew up a master plan for Tel Aviv that was adopted by the city council led by Meir Dizengoff.[7] The core idea was the development of a Garden City. The boundaries he worked within, the Yarkon River in the North and Ibn Gvirol Street in the East, are still regarded as Tel Aviv's real city limits although it has since grown beyond them.[30]

Tel Aviv continued to grow in 1926 but suffered an economic setback between 1927 and 1930.[25][7] At the same time, cultural life was given a boost by the establishment of the Ohel Theater and the decision of Habima Theatre to make Tel Aviv its permanent base in 1931.[25] Tel Aviv gained municipal status in 1934.[25]

The population rose dramatically during the Fifth Aliyah when the Nazis came to power in Germany.[25] As the Jews fled Europe, many settled in Tel Aviv, bringing the population in 1937 to 150,000, compared to Jaffa's 69,000 residents. Within two years, it had reached 160,000, which was over a third of the country's total Jewish population.[25] Many new immigrants remained after disembarking in Jaffa, turning the city into a center of urban life. In the wake of the 1936–39 Arab rioting, a local port independent of Jaffa was built in 1938, and Lod Airport (later Ben Gurion Airport) and Sde Dov Airport opened between 1937 and 1938.[7]

Historic Tel Aviv town hall and Nahum Gutman fountain on Bialik Street

Tel Aviv's White City, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, emerged in the 1930s. Many of the German Jewish architects trained at the Bauhaus, the Modernist school of architecture closed by the Nazis in 1933, fled Germany. Some came to Palestine and adapted the architectural outlook of the Bauhaus as well as other similar schools, to local conditions, creating what is claimed to be the largest concentration of buildings in the International Style in the world.[7][5]

According to the 1947 UN Partition Plan that proposed dividing Palestine into Jewish and Arab states, Tel Aviv, by then a city of 230,000, was slated for inclusion in the Jewish state. Jaffa with, as of 1945, a population of 101,580 people, 53,930 of whom were Muslim and 16,800 Christian, making up the Arab population, and 30,820 Jewish, was designated as part of the Arab state.[31] The Arabs, however, rejected the partition plan.[7] Between 1947 and 1948, tensions grew on the border between Tel Aviv and Jaffa, with Arab snipers firing at Jews from the minaret of the Hassan Bek Mosque. The Haganah and Irgun retaliated with a siege on Jaffa.[7] From April 1948, the Arab residents began to leave. When Jaffa was conquered by Israeli forces on May 14, few remained.[7]

After Israeli independence

The inscription on a memorial on Rothschild Boulevard to Tel Aviv's founders translates as, "I will build thee, and thou shalt be built, oh Virgin of Israel".

By the time of Israel's Declaration of Independence on May 14, 1948, the population of Tel Aviv had risen to more than 200,000.[1] Tel Aviv was the temporary capital of the State of Israel until the government moved to Jerusalem in December 1949. However, due to the international dispute over the status of Jerusalem, most foreign embassies remained in or near Tel Aviv.[13] In the early 1980s, 13 embassies in Jerusalem moved to Tel Aviv as part of the UN's measures responding to Israel's 1980 Jerusalem Law.[32] Today, all but two of the national embassies are in Tel Aviv or the surrounding district.[33] In April 1949, Tel Aviv and Jaffa were united in the single municipality of Tel Aviv-Yafo, and the lands of neighboring villages such as al-Shaykh Muwannis, Jammasin and Sumail, which had been depopulated during the war, were incorporated into the municipality.[34] Tel Aviv thus grew to 42 square kilometers (16.2 sq mi). In 1949, a memorial to the 60 founders of Tel Aviv was constructed.[35] Over the past 60 years, Tel Aviv has developed into a secular, liberal-minded city with a vibrant nightlife and café culture.[7]

In the 1960s, some of the city's Modernist Bauhaus buildings were demolished and replaced by the country's first high-rise buildings, among them the Shalom Meir Tower, which was Israel's tallest building until 1999. Tel Aviv's population peaked in the early 1960s at 390,000, representing 16 percent of the country's total.[36] A long period of steady decline followed, however, and by the late 1980s the city had an aging population of 317,000.[36] High property prices pushed families out and deterred young people from moving in.[36]

At this time, gentrification started taking place in the poorer southern neighborhoods and the old port area in the north was renewed.[7] New laws were introduced to protect the Modernist buildings, and their preservation was further helped by their gaining of UNESCO status. The early 1990s saw the population decline reverse in part due to the large wave of immigrants from the former Soviet Union.[36] The 1990s also saw the emergence of Tel Aviv as a high-tech center.[7] The construction of many skyscrapers and hi-tech office buildings followed, as Tel Aviv moved into a new phase in its development. In 1993 Tel Aviv was, for the first time, mentioned as a World City by Kellerman who emphasized the existence of "leading economic functions typical for the late 20th century city: hi-tech industries and a modern service economy."[37] The city is regarded to be a strong candidate global city with many of the key characteristics of World Cities being present.[10]

Site of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin's assassination at Kikar Malchei Yisrael, later renamed Rabin Square

On November 4, 1995, Israel's prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin, was assassinated at a rally in Tel Aviv in support of the Oslo peace accord. The outdoor plaza where this occurred, formerly known as Kikar Malchei Yisrael, was renamed Rabin Square.[7]

Tel Aviv has suffered from violence by Palestinian terrorist groups since the post-First Intifada period. The first suicide attack in Tel Aviv occurred on October 19, 1994, on the Line 5 bus, when a bomber killed himself and 21 civilians as part of a Hamas suicide campaign. The most deadly attack occurred on June 1, 2001, during the Second Intifada, when a suicide bomb exploded inside a nightclub called the Dolphi Disco, and 21 were killed and more than 100 were injured. The most recent attack in the city occurred on April 17, 2006, when nine people were killed and at least 40 wounded in a suicide bombing near the old central bus station in Tel Aviv. [38]

In recent years, Tel Aviv has seen increasing support towards green issues with the city turning its lights off as part of Earth Hour in March 2008.[39]

Geography

A street in the city center
The city's skyline at night

Tel Aviv is located around 32°5′N 34°48′E / 32.083, 34.8 on the Israeli Mediterranean coastal plain, the historic land bridge between Europe, Asia and Africa. Immediately north of the ancient port of Jaffa, Tel Aviv lies on land that used to be sand dunes and as such has relatively poor soil fertility. The land has been flattened and has no important gradients; its most notable geographical features are bluffs above the Mediterranean coastline and the Yarkon River mouth.[40] Because of the expansion of Tel Aviv and the Gush Dan region, absolute borders between Tel Aviv and Jaffa and between the city's neighborhoods do not exist. The city is 60 kilometers (37 mi) northwest of Jerusalem and 90 kilometers (56 mi) south of the northern port city of Haifa.[41] Neighboring cities and towns include Herzliya to the north, Ramat HaSharon to the northeast, Ramat Gan and Giv'atayim to the east, Holon to the southeast, and Bat Yam to the south.[42] The city is economically stratified between the north and south. South Tel Aviv is generally poor, with the exception of the Neve Tzedek neighborhood and some recent development by the Jaffa beach. It also includes the city's "downtown." Central Tel Aviv includes Tel Aviv's Azrieli Center and is also an important financial and commerce district that stretches along the part of Ramat Gan on the Ayalon Highway. The northern side of Tel Aviv is home to Tel Aviv University and some of Tel Aviv's most expensive upper class residential neighborhoods. The prosperity of the north stretches to neighboring Herzliya Pituah, Ramat HaSharon, and Kfar Shmaryahu.[43]

Climate

Tel Aviv has a Mediterranean climate with hot summers, pleasant springs and autumns, and cool, wet winters (Köppen climate classification Csa). Humidity tends to be high year-round due to the city's proximity to the sea. In winter, temperatures seldom drop below 5 °C (40 °F) and are usually between 10 °C (50 °F) and 15 °C (60 °F); the city has not seen proper snow since 1950.[44] In summer the average is 26 °C (80 °F), and often daytime temperatures exceed 32 °C (90 °F). Despite the high humidity, precipitation during summertime is rare. The average annual rainfall is 530.5 millimeters (20.9 in), usually concentrated in the period October to April.[45] Tel Aviv experiences on average more than 300 sunny days a year. The record high temperature the city has seen is 43 °C (110 °F), whilst the city's record low is −1.9 °C (30 °F).[46][47]

 Weather averages for Tel Aviv 
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 17.5
(63.5)
17.7
(63.7)
19.2
(66.6)
22.8
(73.0)
24.9
(76.8)
27.5
(81.5)
29.4
(84.9)
30.2
(86.4)
29.4
(84.9)
27.3
(81.1)
23.4
(74.1)
19.2
(66.6)
24.0
(75.2)
Average low °C (°F) 9.0
(48.5)
9.8
(49.6)
11.5
(52.7)
14.4
(57.9)
17.3
(63.1)
20.6
(69.1)
23.0
(73.4)
23.7
(74.7)
22.5
(72.5)
19.1
(66.4)
14.6
(58.3)
11.2
(52.2)
16.4
(61.5)
Precipitation mm (inches) 126.9
(8.8)
90.1
(5.0)
60.6
(0.9)
18.0
(0.1)
2.3
(0.3)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0.5
(0)
26.3
(0.1)
79.3
(2.5)
126.4
(3.9)
530.5
(21.5)
Source: World Weather Information Service[48][49]

Districts

Further information: Neighborhoods of Tel Aviv
Tel Aviv viewed from Old Jaffa

Tel Aviv is made up of nine districts that have formed naturally over the city's short history. The most notable of these is Jaffa, the ancient port city out of which Tel Aviv grew. This area is traditionally made up demographically of a greater percentage of Arabs, but recent gentrification is replacing them with a young professional population. Similar processes are occurring in nearby Neve Tzedek, the original Jewish neighborhood outside of Jaffa. Ramat Aviv, a neighborhood in the northern part of the city largely made up of luxury apartments and including the Tel Aviv University, is currently undergoing extensive expansion and is set to absorb the beachfront property of Sde Dov Airport after its decommissioning.[50] The area known as HaKirya is the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) headquarters and a large military base.[43]

Historically, there was a demographic split between the Ashkenazi and European northern side of the city, including the district of Ramat Aviv, and the southern, more Sephardi and Mizrahi neighborhoods including Neve Tzedek and Florentin.[7]

Since the 1980s, however, restoration and gentrification has taken place on a large scale in the southern neighborhoods, making them some of the city’s most desirable neighborhoods for the more prosperous north Tel Avivis.[7] In north Tel Aviv, the old port area, which had become run-down since the port was decommissioned in 1965, also saw an urban revival, becoming an upmarket area with shops and restaurants.[7]

Architecture

Further information: White City (Tel Aviv) and Buildings and structures in Tel Aviv
Bauhaus structure on Rothschild Boulevard

The early architecture of Tel Aviv consisted largely of Eastern European-style single-story houses with red-tiled roofs.[30] Neve Tzedek, the first neighborhood to be constructed outside of Jaffa is characterised by two-story sandstone buildings.[5] By the 1920s, a new eclectic Orientalist style came into vogue, combining European architecture with Middle Eastern features such as arches, domes and ornamental tiles.[30] Municipal construction followed the "garden city" master plan drawn up by Patrick Geddes. Two- and three-story buildings were interspersed with boulevards and public parks.[30] Bauhaus architecture was introduced in the 1920s and 1930s by German Jewish architects who settled in Palestine after the rise of the Nazis. Tel Aviv's White City, in north Tel Aviv, contains more than 5,000 Modernist-style buildings inspired by the Bauhaus school and Le Corbusier.[5][6] Construction of these buildings, later declared protected landmarks and, collectively, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, continued until the 1950s in the area around Rothschild Boulevard.[6][51] Three thousand buildings were created in this style between 1931 and 1939 alone.[30]

In the 1960s, this architectural style gave way to office towers and a chain of waterfront hotels and commercial skyscrapers.[7] Some of the city's Modernist buildings were neglected to the point of ruin. Before legislation to preserve this landmark architecture, many of the old buildings were demolished. In recent years, efforts have been made to refurbish Bauhaus buildings and restore them to their original condition.[52] In recent years, Tel Aviv has become a hub of modern high-rise architecture due to the soaring price of real-estate in the city. The Shalom Meir Tower, Israel's first skyscraper, was built in Tel Aviv in 1965 and remained the country's tallest building until 1999. The Azrieli Center, composed of three buildings— one square, one triangular, and one circular—usurped that title. Since 2001, Israel's tallest building is the City Gate Tower, which is located in the neighboring city of Ramat Gan, although the country's tallest wholly residential building, the Neve Tzedek Tower, is in Tel Aviv. New neighborhoods such as the Park Tzameret are being constructed to house luxury apartment towers including YOO Tel Aviv towers designed by Philippe Starck, while zones such as The southern Kirya are being developed with office towers. Other recent additions to Tel Aviv's skyline are the 1 Rothschild Tower, Be'eri Nahardea Tower and First International Bank Tower.[53][54]

Demographics

City of Tel Aviv
Population by year
[36][7][1][5][25]
1920 2,000
1925 34,000
1937 150,000
1939 160,000
1948 200,000
1960 390,000
1989 317,000
2008 390,100

The city has a population of 390,100 spread over a land area of 51,788 dunams (51.8 km2) (20 mi²), yielding a population density of 7,533 people per square kilometer (19,510 per square mile). According to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), as of June 2006 Tel Aviv's population is growing at an annual rate of 0.9%. It consists of 91.8% Jews, 4.2% Arabs and 4.0% others (Christians, Buddhists).[55] The city is relatively multicultural, and many languages such as Russian, French, Tagalog, Thai, Arabic, Amharic and English are often spoken aside Hebrew. According to some estimates, about 50,000 unregistered Asian foreign workers live in the city.[56] Compared with other Westernised cities, crime in Tel Aviv is relatively low.[57]

According to Tel Aviv-Yafo Municipality, the average income in the city is 20% above the national average, with an unemployment rate of 6.9%.[58] The city's education standards are above the national average: of its 12th-grade students, 64.4% are eligible for matriculation certificates, the qualification received by high school graduates.[58] The age profile is relatively even, with 22.2% aged under 20, 18.5% aged 20–29, 24% aged 30–44, 16.2% aged between 45 and 59, and 19.1% older than 60.[59]

Tel Aviv's population reached a peak in the early 1960s at around 390,000, falling to 317,000 in the late 1980s as high property prices forced families out and deterred young couples from moving in.[36] Since the mass immmigration from the former Soviet Union in the 1990s, the population has risen steadily.[36] Today, the city's population is young and growing.[60] In 2006, 22,000 people moved to the city, while only 18,500 left,[60] and many of the new families had young children. The population of Tel Aviv is expected to reach 450,000 by 2025; meanwhile, the average age of residents in the city fell from 35.8 in 1983 to 34 in 2008.[60] The population over age 65 stands at 14.6% compared with 19% in 1983.[60]

Religion

The Great Synagogue of Tel Aviv in the 1930s

Despite its image as a secular city, Tel Aviv has about a hundred synagogues, including historic buildings such as the Great Synagogue, established in the 1930s.[61] In recent years, a center for secular Jewish Studies and a "secular yeshiva" have opened in the city.[62] Tensions between religious and secular Jews before the gay pride parade ended in vandalization of a synagogue[63]

One of Tel Aviv's famous landmarks is the Hassan Bek Mosque, on the beachfront. Jaffa is home to a sizable Muslim and Christian population. The number of churches has grown in recent years to accommodate the religious needs of diplomats and foreign workers.[64]

The Tel Aviv District is 93 percent Jewish, 1 percent Muslim, and 1 percent Christian. The remaining 5 percent are not classified by religion.[65] Israel Meir Lau is chief rabbi of the city.[66]

Economy

Tel Aviv Stock Exchange
Shuk HaCarmel market

Since Tel Aviv was built on sand dunes, farming was not profitable and maritime commerce was centered in Haifa and Ashdod. Instead, the city gradually developed as a center for scientific and technical research. In 1974, Intel opened its first overseas research and development operation in the city, and Tel Aviv emerged as a high-tech center in the 1990s.[7] Economic activities in the city account for about 15 percent of national employment and about 17 percent of GDP.[36] Forty percent of national employment in finance and 25 percent of national employment in business services is in the city.[36]

The economy of Tel Aviv has developed dramatically over the past decades. The city has been described as a flourishing technological center by Newsweek and a "miniature Los Angeles" by The Economist.[67][7] Many computer scientists, their numbers increased by immigration from the former Soviet Union since the early 1990s, live and work in Tel Aviv. In 1998, the city was described by Newsweek as one of the top 10 most technologically influential cities in the world. Since then, high-tech industry in the Tel Aviv area has developed even more.[67] The Tel Aviv metropolitan area (including satellite cities such as Herzliya and Petah Tikva) is Israel's center of high-tech and is sometimes referred to as Silicon Wadi.[67][11] Tel Aviv is home to the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE), Israel's only stock exchange, which has reached record heights since the 1990s.[68] Many international venture-capital firms, scientific research institutes and high-tech companies are headquartered in the city. Industries in Tel Aviv include chemical processing, textile plants and food manufacturers.[7] The city's nightlife, cultural attractions and architecture attract tourists whose spending benefits the local economy.[69]

The Globalization and World Cities Study Group and Network (GaWC) at Loughborough University has constructed an inventory of world cities based on their level of advanced producer services. The inventory lists Tel Aviv as having "strong evidence" of world city formation—the highest ranking for a Middle Eastern city with the exception of partly-European Istanbul.[70]

Nine of the fifteen Israeli billionaires live in Israel; four live in Tel Aviv or its suburbs, according to Forbes.[71][72] The cost of living in Israel is high, with Tel Aviv being its most expensive city to live in. According to Mercer, a human resources consulting firm based in New York, as of 2008 Tel Aviv is the most expensive city in the Middle East and the 14th most expensive in the world. It falls just behind Singapore and Paris and just ahead of Sydney and Dublin in this respect. By comparison, New York City is 22nd.[11]

Culture

Tourism and recreation

Tel Aviv beachfront skyline

As a Mediterranean city, Tel Aviv is a magnet for international tourism likened by some to Barcelona and Miami.[9][73] It was described as a top international tourism destination by New York Magazine and the New York Times.[74][75] According to the Tel Aviv Municipality, it has 44 hotels with more than 5,800 rooms.[58] Tel Aviv has been called "the city that never sleeps" due to its thriving nightlife and 24-hour culture.[76][77][78]

Tel Aviv's largest urban public space is Hayarkon Park. Other parks such as Meir Garden and Dubnow Park are located in the city center area. Seventeen percent of the city is covered in plants.[58] Dizengoff Center was Israel's first mall. Tel Aviv has branches of some of the world's leading hotels, among them the Crowne Plaza, Sheraton, Dan, Isrotel and Hilton. It is home to many museums, architectural and cultural sites, and city tours are available in different languages.[79] Apart from bus tours, there are architectural tours[80] and Segway tours[81] and walking tours.[82] The nightlife is particularly active around the beachfront promenades because of its many nightclubs and bars. The city has a wide variety of restaurants offering traditional Israeli dishes as well as international fare. More than 100 sushi restaurants, the third highest concentration in the world, do business in the city, and an Italian restaurant in Tel Aviv was called the best Italian restaurant