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NEW CONSTANTINOPLE

City by the Golden Horn The German architect, Professor Herman Ehlgoetz, whose designs for the rebuilding of Constantinople the Turkish Government recently adjudged the best, lias now made generally known the broad outlines of his plan for transforming the capital in the course of the next 50 years into a modern yet characteristically Turkish city. The competing architects were advised to take into special consideration the peculiar geographical situation of the city, the climate, the steadily increasing traffic, and the desirability of preserving and showing off historic buildings. Professor Ehlgoetz’s plan includes the construction of a series of terrace roads flanked by low shade-giving houses with gardens, and he has persuaded the city authorities in future to forbid the erection of any buildings more than three stories high. The main street of Constantinople is to run from . the famous Ilagia Sofia to the Bajbsid Square, near which a communal forum will be built. Provision' is further made in the architect’s plan for the laying out of a new park, and the building of a new theatre and hospital, and an impressive entry for what is popularly known as Hie London-Istanbul road. The present seaplane harbour at Bujark-Dere being inadequate, a new harbour is to be built on the Tschekmedie Lake, together with a motor road to connect the harbour with the capital. The harbour for shipping will be modernised though not enlarged. An underground railway is to run from Pera in the north to Galata, the Golden Horn Hagia Sofia, the Sultan Archmed Mosque, and stations in the west. Professor Ehlgoetz hopes to be able to persuade the authorities to give the contract for the buillding of the railway to a German engineering firm.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19350412.2.133

Bibliographic details

Dominion, Volume 28, Issue 168, 12 April 1935, Page 12

Word Count
286

NEW CONSTANTINOPLE Dominion, Volume 28, Issue 168, 12 April 1935, Page 12

NEW CONSTANTINOPLE Dominion, Volume 28, Issue 168, 12 April 1935, Page 12