The Aga
Khan Award for Architecture 2004
The Ninth
Award Cycle, 2002-2004
Old City of Jerusalem Revitalization Programme (OCJRP),
Old City, Jerusalem
| Sponsor: |
Welfare
Association, Switzerland |
| Conservation: |
OCJRP Technical
Office, Jerusalem |
| Completion: |
Ongoing since 1996 |
Description
Jerusalem has an extraordinarily long and
varied history, but the urban fabric of the old
city is threatened by overcrowding, lack of maintenance
and poor services. The Old City of Jerusalem Revitalization
Programme aims to rehabilitate the city, to preserve
its heritage and to create a better quality of
life for its inhabitants. It is a comprehensive
project aimed at every aspect of human life, with
several components, including restoration, training,
education and raising public awareness. All these
components are tied together to achieve an integrated
and enduring revitalization. The body of completed
works to date includes over 160 projects, all
undertaken in close collaboration with local institutions,
international organizations and funding agencies.
The urban fabric has suffered from neglect, inappropriate
use and inadequate services, with many people
living in dilapidated buildings in unsanitary
conditions. To address these issues the Welfare
Association – a Geneva-based non-governmental
organization established in 1983 to support Palestinians
in all development areas – set up a technical
office in Jerusalem in 1995. The office is composed
of professionals from different fields: architecture,
engineering, planning, economics and history.
Its main aim is to implement a comprehensive programme
for the rehabilitation of the old city, comprising
a number of complementary components: a revitalization
plan; emergency restoration; total restoration;
training in conservation; a community outreach
programme; and an information centre.
The Old City Revitalization Plan forms the basis
of the programme’s work. A broad survey
was carried out to identify the buildings most
in danger and make proposals for their rehabilitation.
The aim is not the immediate restoration of a
contiguous quarter but interventions throughout
the old city. Many of the projects are houses
– either single buildings of two or three
storeys housing one or two families, or traditional
residential complexes (hosh) of several units
surrounding a courtyard and housing up to ten
families. The programme also focuses on major
public or religious buildings – mosques,
churches, madrasas (schools) and hostels –
some of which retain their original function,
while others are adapted to a new use.
Buildings are selected either for emergency or
total restoration. Emergency restoration is normally
a quick and limited intervention to solve particularly
urgent problems that pose immediate health or
safety risks, such as structural instability or
water leakage. The duration of the projects varies
from about three months for a small house to many
years for non-residential projects; work on buildings
of historic and architectural value is carried
out slowly and sensitively and decisions are made
with great care. Dar al Aytam is one such example,
and this historical orphanage, comprising five
monumental buildings from the Mamluk and Ottoman
periods, including a soup kitchen and bakery established
by the wife of Sultan Süleyman, is being
upgraded incrementally as an educational institution.
The other areas of the programme complement the
restoration work to ensure the sustainability
of the improvements. Training for architects,
engineers, contractors and craftspeople is provided
through short courses, internships and fellowships
to study abroad. A community outreach programme
encourages public awareness and participation
in the rehabilitation process and organizes publications,
meetings, workshops and lectures for schools,
religious organizations, residents and users.
Further components of the programme are also proposed:
an information centre and a data bank of conservation
professionals and organizations, and the Jerusalem
Institute for the Preservation of Architectural
Heritage in Palestine.
By the end of 2003, eighty-two residential projects
and twenty-six public and fifty-five commercial
buildings had been restored through the programme,
providing decent living conditions for residents,
creating new spaces for the community and ensuring
the preservation of the rich historic fabric of
the old city.
Jury Citation
The programme has received an Award for its comprehensive
approach towards sustaining the life of a community
in its natural setting – a life threatened
by the deterioration of its physical, social and
economic conditions.
The project is successful in addressing several
issues, including the restoration and rehabilitation
of housing, as well as the adaptive reuse of historic
buildings and monuments for new functions. The
programme is notable for the training it provides
in conservation for architects, engineers, contractors
and craftspeople, and for the establishment of
an information centre and a database for the old
city, including documentation, surveys, research
and studies. Finally, the project has created
a community outreach programme to raise public
awareness of the value of historic buildings and
to encourage public participation in the process
of rehabilitation and restoration.
This effort is conducted under severe constraints,
restoring the old city as a living, vibrant and
beautiful environment. The process is meticulously
conducted by a team of professionals motivated
by their love of the place and its people. This
is a project about dignity and self-esteem.
Project
Data
Project principals
Welfare Association, Switzerland: Hisham
Qaddumi, Jordan, Chairman of the Technical Committee
of the OCJRP; Ismael el Zabri, Jordan, Director
General; Shadia Touqan, Jerusalem, Director of
the OCJRP Technical Office.
Partners
Department of Islamic Waqf, Jerusalem; Division
of Cultural Heritage, United Nations Educational,
Scientific, and Cultural Organization, France.
Sponsors
Arab Fund for Economic and Social Development,
Kuwait; Islamic Development Bank, Saudi Arabia;
the Ford Foundation, US.
Project team
Ehab Zuheaka, Deputy Director; Khalid Halabi,
Supervision Unit Manager; Amal Abu al Hawa, Samer
Rantisi, Sahar Ghazal, Bashar Husseini, Faten
Lafi, Bahi Abdel Hadi, Marah el Aloui and Nisreen
Karsou, architects; Khaled Muhanna, Lana el Khushashi
and Suhad al Bakri, civil engineers; Hazem Quneibi
and Wafa Elder, administration; Arda Batarseh,
information manager, Yousef Natche, architectural
historian; Anita Vitullo, editor. (All based in
Jerusalem.)
Consultants
Instituto Veneto per i Beni Culturali, Italy,
2002–present; Riwaq Centre for Architectural
Conservation, Ramallah: Suad al Amiri, Director,
1998–2000; Centre for Conservation and Preservation
of Islamic Architectural Heritage, Egypt: Saleh
Lamei Mostafa, Director 1997–98.
| Commission |
July 1994 |
| Design |
1995–ongoing |
| Construction |
1995–ongoing |
| Occupation |
Since 1996 |
| Site area |
871,000 m2 Old City |
| Cost |
US$ 12,382,000 (1996–2003) |
Project
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