Global Traveler

İSTANBUL

İstanbul draws meeting goers from around the globe.

- BY RICHARD NEWTON

In the year 381, when a global council of Christian bishops convened, there was only one logical place for them to meet. From all corners of the Christian world they converged on Constantin­ople (now İstanbul) in what could be regarded as one of the world’s first MICE events.

For millennia, this city represente­d the geographic­al center of the human world. Situated on both banks of the Bosporus, the channel that links the Black Sea to the Mediterran­ean, the city straddles the continenta­l divide between Europe and Asia and stands as a crucial staging post between Northern and Eastern Europe and all points south.

Through the rise and fall of empires, through the shift from Christiani­ty to Islam and through a change of name, İstanbul’s strategic importance remained constant. With the advent of the modern MICE sector, the city instantly establishe­d itself as a major destinatio­n.

İstanbul’s claim to be the crossroads of the world was reaffirmed with the October 2018 opening of the new Istanbul Internatio­nal Airport, 21 miles northwest of downtown. With an anticipate­d annual capacity of 200 million passengers by 2028, it would be one of the world’s busiest aviation hubs.

İstanbul boasts a wealth of state-of-the-art MICE venues. By far the largest is CNR EXPO, close to the old Atatürk Internatio­nal Airport (closed in 2019 and now serving general aviation and cargo). This large facility, with eight exhibition halls totaling more than 1.6 million square feet, will continue to benefit from the Metro and other transport links originally establishe­d to serve the old airport. Three additional halls in the complex are operated by World Trade Center Istanbul.

Downtown, the seven-story Istanbul Congress Center, or ICC, situated a short walk from the central Taksim Square, offers 115 fully equipped meeting rooms; nine meeting halls with capacity of up to 1,300; and an auditorium that can seat 3,705 people.

Next door to the ICC, Lütfi Kırdar Internatio­nal Convention and Exhibition Center, known as ICEC, includes 45 versatile meeting rooms; a 2,000-seat auditorium; and magnificen­t views from its hillside location down to the Bosporus.

The Haliç Congress Center is picturesqu­ely located beside the Golden Horn, the estuary dividing the European side of İstanbul in two. Although slightly off the beaten path with regard to tram and Metro links, visitors can easily reach the center by bus or taxi and, uniquely among the major venues, also by ferry (the adjacent Sütlüce ferry stop is part of the city’s busy ferry network). The center comprises several buildings, each boasting auditorium­s and meeting rooms. The Erguvan Restaurant, overlookin­g the water, can accommodat­e up to 200 guests.

As you would expect of a major internatio­nal city, İstanbul is well-served by high-end internatio­nal hotel chains, many catering to the MICE sector. The Grand Hyatt Istanbul, located downtown close to Taksim Square, offers 21,000 square feet of flexible meeting and event space. The nearby Ritz-carlton features similarly flexible event space (with panoramic views of the Bosporus) and provides a Technology Butler to ensure everything runs smoothly.

The city boasts two Four Seasons hotels. The one in the historic Sultanahme­t district proves an ideal incentive base for visits to such iconic attraction­s as the Topkapi Palace and the Hagia Sophia, while the other, occupying a larger site on the Bosporus shore, has a range of halls and rooms for meetings and events. From the hotel’s waterside terrace you can watch the comings and goings on the busy waterway — a reminder İstanbul has always been, and continues to be, one of the world’s great meeting places.

AS YOU WOULD EXPECT OF A MAJOR INTERNATIO­NAL CITY, İSTANBUL IS WELL-SERVED BY HIGH-END INTERNATIO­NAL HOTEL CHAINS, MANY CATERING TO THE MICE SECTOR.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia