Downtown

What was once nothing but rubble, a no-man’s-land of warring guerrillas and hidden snipers, is today the most prominent example in the world of a city centre rebuilt from the ashes.

Yet as one tragedy is built over and forgotten, another begins. The key player in downtown’s reconstruction, Lebanon’s assassinated former Prime Minister and major partner in Solidere (the company responsible for the rebuilding) Rafic Hariri, now lies entombed next to the giant mosque he built facing Martyr’s Square. He was killed in a massive car bomb on 14 February 2005, by as yet unknown culprits.

What Hariri created in downtown has been both attacked and praised, but in the end what cannot be denied is that from ashes a vibrant city centre has been created with pedestrianized avenues and numerous street cafés and restaurants competing with a clutch of reconstructed mosques and churches.

Downtown, which consists mainly of boutique shops, offices, investment banks and parliament and government offices, has been criticized for lacking soul, being merely a touristic Disneyland for visitors to drink arak and smoke nargileh in the sunshine or cool of the evening. To be fair, during high season it attracts primarily that clientele with many Lebanese preferring to frequent the less touristy neighbourhoods of Achrafieh and Gemayzeh.

Yet for all the complaints levelled against it, downtown remains the cleanest area of the capital, with the least traffic (something that makes a huge difference in this town full of brand new SUVs and smoke-belching old Mercedes taxis) and wide streets coupled with ancient temples and ruins – including the Roman baths which sit in a garden beneath the government Seraille building. The old Ottoman and French Mandate-era buildings have been restored and some completely demolished and rebuilt making it difficult to tell the difference between the genuine and the faux.

There are numerous shops selling mainly clothes, shoes and jewellery and some restaurants, in particular the Lebanese ones, are well worth visiting. Look out for Karam and Al-Balad.

There are also a number of clubs and bars, which do a roaring evening trade especially during the summer months – Taboo and Baby M in particular are popular as is Beirut’s version of Paris legendary lounge club Buddha Bar.

What downtown lacks is a major national museum of art, theatre or decent cultural space, something which angers many local people who ask how a new city centre can be built without thought for art, but merely for business and leisure. Still, there are numerous music festivals and random street exhibitions that happen in downtown throughout the year – check the Beirut Jazz Festival, which occurs in July as does the French Cultural Mission’s Fête de La Musique.

Also in downtown is the recently inaugurated Saifi Village of arts located in the main residential part of the area off Martyr’s Square. Here there are a number of new fashion boutiques, furniture and artisan stores and art galleries vying to create a mini cultural centre. It is, if not perfect, a good start.

With a few more years and more investment downtown will  become a true focal point for the city but at present it remains one for the moneyed few rather than the majority of the city’s population.

Once the reclaimed land next to the Beirut port is fully rehabilitated, a new park will be built surrounded by many new high-rise apartment buildings in an effort to create a modern and landmark skyline, downtown could really come to life.

A great place to walk, make sure to visit Martyr’s Square where in March 2005 almost a million Lebanese congregated to demonstrate for independence from foreign interference in the country – the biggest protest in Lebanon’s history.


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