The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Downtown Cairo battles to keep cultural heritage alive

- By Mona Salem

CAIRO: Cairo’s downtown, with its old European-designed buildings, is wrestling to preserve its cultural heritage as Egypt readies a new capital in the desert.

A stroll through the district takes pedestrian­s past buildings that meld Islamic and European motifs, neo-classical columns and ornate decoration­s.

But its elegance and prestige are fading, as the one-way streets and former palaces fall into ruin and shops selling cheap clothes and odds and ends have moved in.

“Some buildings are in a seriously dilapidate­d state,” said Ahmed El Bindari, an architectu­ral historian and volunteer tour guide, in the middle of a group of tourists.

He enthusiast­ically recounts the history of the old buildings, some housing government ministries, and little passageway­s but complains of a lack of political will in heritage preservati­on.

Bindari and others fear for the future of the district’s old vacant buildings and worry that those in urgent need of repair will fall victim to a drive for urban renewal.

We’ve repainted entire buildings and restored decoration­s using similar material to what was originally used during constructi­on. We must maintain this historic district so it doesn’t turn into slums in the future. Riham Aram, director of the Historic Cairo Restoratio­n Project

- European influences -

In the heart of Cairo and bordering Tahrir Square, the district is commonly known as Khedivial Cairo after Khedive Ismail Pasha, an Ottoman ruler who governed Egypt in the mid19th century.

He is credited with transformi­ng Cairo into a modern metropolis with European influences after being inspired on a trip to Paris.

Khedive Ismail ordered the building of the first opera house in the Middle East in 1869 to celebrate the inaugurati­on of the strategic Suez Canal.

He also commission­ed French architects to design geometric, tree-lined streets and downtown became the cultural hub of the city flourishin­g with cafes, cinemas and shops.

With its big avenues, facades and bronze statues recalling the French or Italian capitals, the district has also long hosted a lively literary cafe scene, as well as government ministry buildings.

Authoritie­s have traditiona­lly been careful to ensure the buildings retain their style, and many in the city of around 20 million residents are fond of the area.

- ‘Regenerati­on banner’ -

Since the 1950s however, middle-class residents have progressiv­ely moved out of the area in favour of quieter, smarter and more modern suburbs.

The ministries and public authoritie­s still there are due to move too, once the new administra­tive capital being built in the desert some 45 kilometres (28 miles) from the city centre is ready. “What will become of the many ministries such as agricultur­e, education and health housed in historic palaces and buildings?” Bindari asked. He points to the gentrifica­tion of the so-called Maspero Triangle area hugging the banks of the River Nile which the government is redevelopi­ng into a financial centre, with luxurious shopping malls and hotels. It has led to thousands of residents in informal housing being relocated to alternativ­e accommodat­ion.

“I’m afraid that under the banner of regenerati­on, entire urban areas... will be razed to the ground,” Bindari added. - Cause for optimism? -

But Riham Aram, director of the Historic Cairo Restoratio­n Project, is more upbeat.

Since 2014, some 350 buildings have already been restored under an initiative for Khedivial Cairo, she said. “We’ve repainted entire

buildings and restored decoration­s using similar material to what was originally used during constructi­on,” she said.

“We must maintain this historic district so it doesn’t turn into slums in the future,” she warned.

And she said that ways to reuse 18 government buildings in central Cairo would be examined. - Economic return -

The private sector has also become involved in efforts to preserve the downtown area.

In 2008, a group of businessme­n from local constructi­on firm Ismailia Consortium set up an arm of the company to restore city centre cultural heritage.

“We found that the best way to conserve downtown Cairo is that there needs to be economic returns,” said managing director Karim el-Shafei.

“A lot of the apartments are empty. They can be renovated and rented out or sold bringing in profits because they are being used productive­ly,” he added.

The firm has bought 32 downtown buildings as well as the historic Cinema Radio located on Talaat Harb street.

But it faces several bureaucrat­ic hurdles even for routine procedures such as opening a new cafe.

Shafei is also keen to draw tourists to the centre to shop for locally made brands.

But it is not all about investing just to make money, when it comes to restoring important sites, some experts note.

“Along with the focus on the new capital, we hope that interest is not lost in the conservati­on of Cairo’s cultural heritage,” said Soheir Hawas, a Cairo University professor, who authored a volume on the area’s architectu­re.

Hawas, also a member of the National Urban Harmony Committee, wants to see government buildings turned into museums and cultural centres.

“These are important pages in Egypt’s long and continuous architectu­ral record and must be preserved,” she argued. — AFP

 ??  ?? A view of the central Talaat Harb square in the Egyptian capital Cairo’s downtown district. Cairo’s unique downtown district, with its elegant centuries-old, European-designed buildings, is wrestling to preserve its cultural heritage as the government prepares to move offices to a new desert capital. — AFP photos by Khaled Desouki
A view of the central Talaat Harb square in the Egyptian capital Cairo’s downtown district. Cairo’s unique downtown district, with its elegant centuries-old, European-designed buildings, is wrestling to preserve its cultural heritage as the government prepares to move offices to a new desert capital. — AFP photos by Khaled Desouki
 ??  ?? Ahmed al-Bindari, an Egyptian historian and photograph­er of modern (19th-20th century) Cairene architectu­re, holds up an architectu­re catalogue showing the historic Cairo Opera House (dating to 1896) which burnt down in the mid-20th century (Left) and the First Museum of Modern Art at the Musairi Serail (Right), during an interview at his office in the capital Cairo on March 8.
Ahmed al-Bindari, an Egyptian historian and photograph­er of modern (19th-20th century) Cairene architectu­re, holds up an architectu­re catalogue showing the historic Cairo Opera House (dating to 1896) which burnt down in the mid-20th century (Left) and the First Museum of Modern Art at the Musairi Serail (Right), during an interview at his office in the capital Cairo on March 8.
 ??  ?? A view of the Said Halim Pasha Palace (1896-1899) in Champollio­n street, in the capital Cairo central downtown district.
A view of the Said Halim Pasha Palace (1896-1899) in Champollio­n street, in the capital Cairo central downtown district.
 ??  ?? Bindari points at an architectu­re catalogue showing the historic Sherif Pasha Serail (dating to 1870).
Bindari points at an architectu­re catalogue showing the historic Sherif Pasha Serail (dating to 1870).

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