King Hussein Palace, Jerusalem, Israel

Hi,
This Building is standing there as long as I remember myself, Standing alone on top of the hill while surrounded by growing neighbors. But no one is touching King Hussein Palace or even thinking of building around it. And if one does, Israel is keeping on it as it was her own property.

It is standing on one of the highest points in Northern Jerusalem (837m above sea level) with a beautiful view: From the sea in the West to the Jordanian mountains in the East.

The hill itself is a tell, Tell el-Fūl  (“mound of fava beans” in Arabic)  and it sometimes considered as the Biblical Hill Of king Saul. Not only a beautiful view but also historical.

I never been up there, to the skeleton of the building: only slabs and columns. It was designed to be King Hussein Summer Palace but the building (started around 1965) was stopped because of Six Day war, when Israel took control of the west bank. I had a work around and decided to finally climb up there.

Take Care
Gad

Climbing the hill to the palace... King Hussein PalaceClimbing the hill to the palace…

  The Chalk stone the hill is made ofThe Chalk stone the hill is made of

The skeleton was done, and some of  the later works were beginning - King Hussein PalaceThe skeleton was done, and some of  the later works were beginning

The building was designed to have arches (that as you can see are only architectural cover over thin concrete columns) - King Hussein PalaceThe building was designed to have arches (that as you can see are only architectural cover over thin concrete columns)

The slabs are ribs slab – allow big spans as a palace needThe entrance is covered with stones - King Hussein Palace The entrance is covered with stonesThe shed over the entrance had already collapsed (this is what expected form such a thin concrete slab with no maintenance)   - King Hussein Palace The shed over the entrance had already collapsed (this is what expected form such a thin concrete slab with no maintenance)Second floor   - King Hussein Palace  Second floor

Second floor missing column, seems the building has enough redundancy to have a second static scheme - King Hussein PalaceSecond floor missing column, seems the building has enough redundancy to have a second static scheme

 

Looking West - you can see Nabi Samwil - King Hussein PalaceLooking West – you can see Nabi Samwil

Looking south - over Jerusalem

Looking south - over Jerusalem - Looking West - King Hussein PalaceLooking south – over Jerusalem

Looking East to JordanLooking East to Jordan

  Looking north to Ramallah    Looking north to Ramallah   Looking north to Ramallah

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King Hussein Palace, Jerusalem, Israel

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King Hussein Palace, Jerusalem, Israel 31.823101, 35.231051