Cairo
Governorate and Aga Khan Trust for Culture in Public-Private
Partnership for Historic Cairo Revitalisation Projects
Cairo, 17 July 2007 – Cairo’s
Governor, H.E. Dr. Abdel Azim Wazir, and the Aga Khan
Trust for Culture’s General Manager, Mr. Luis
Monreal, today signed an historic Public-Private Partnership
(PPP) linking Al-Azhar Park, a future “Urban
Plaza” project at the northern end of the Park,
and ongoing work by the Aga Khan Trust for Culture
in Darb al-Ahmar.
The
“Urban Plaza” project will be a mixed-use
centre with underground car parking, shops and cultural
facilities, including the Museum of Historic Cairo,
which is being built by the Aga Khan Trust for Culture
in cooperation with the Supreme Council of Antiquities
of Egypt.
The
Museum will house some of the great wealth of art
and artefacts of Cairo’s Islamic heritage that
are not currently on display. To be built adjacent
to the “Urban Plaza” at the north end
of Al-Azhar Park and close to the end of the twelfth
century Ayyubid Wall, the Museum will give visitors
insight into the urban, cultural and architectural
history of the heart of Cairo.
To
conserve and restore all the artefacts and artworks
which will be shown in the museum, the Trust has set
up a major conservation laboratory, which is training
young technicians in this field. It is also being
used to restore important art and architectural elements
for the Cairo Museum of Islamic Art, due to open in
2007.
The
Public-Private Partnership builds on the US$ 30 million
Azhar Park project, which transformed a 500-year-old
accumulation of fill and debris on the Darassa site
into much-needed leisure and recreational space.
The
Park attracted over a million visitors in 2006. The
construction of the Park and the restoration of cultural
monuments in the neighbouring Darb al-Ahmar, including
Umm al Sultan Shabaan mosque and the Kheyrbek complex,
have become catalysts for social and economic development
in the district. The project also includes rehabilitation
of housing, microfinance, health care and training
in a number of fields, including restoration, carpentry
and computer skills.
For
more information, please contact:
Dr.
Mohamed el Mikawi, CEO
Aga Khan Cultural Services (Egypt)
Tel: +20 22 510 7378/ 3868
Fax: +20 22 512 1054
Notes
The
Aga Khan Trust for Culture focuses on the physical,
social, cultural and economic revitalisation of communities
in the Muslim world. It includes the Award for Architecture,
the Historic Cities Programme, the Music Initiative
in Central Asia, Museum Projects, the on-line resource
ArchNet and the Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture
at Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology.
The
Aga Khan Trust for Culture is a part of the Aga Khan
Development Network (AKDN). AKDN agencies address
a broad spectrum of development issues in the social,
economic and cultural spheres. Social development
programmes in Egypt include healthcare, education,
microfinance, training, housing rehabilitation, cultural
restoration and economic development.
The
Aga Khan Development Network is a group of private,
non-denominational, international development agencies
created by His Highness the Aga Khan. The Network
is grounded in Islam’s ethics of inclusiveness,
compassion, sharing, self-reliance, respect for health
and life, cultivation of a sound and enlightened mind,
and humanity’s collective responsibility for
a sustainable physical, social and cultural environment.
AKDN is active in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Canada,
Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Iran, Ivory Coast,
Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kyrgyz Republic, Madagascar, Mali,
Mozambique, Pakistan, Portugal, Syria, Tajikistan,
Tanzania, Uganda, United Kingdom, United States and
Zanzibar.
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