ThEtEril0R41/11SilCiEWS Revolutionary Plan for Israel's Capital By GEOFF SIFRIN Israel Scene JERUSALEM — Within about six months, bulldoz- ers will start digging away at the hillside below the Jaffa Gate entrance to the Old City of Jerusalem. Thus will begin the -con- struction stage of an am- - bitious project for the rede- velopment of the 120- dunam (30-acres) Mamilla Quarter which lies just out- side the Old- City walls. The plan for Mamilla, formulated by architects Moshe Safdie and Gilbert Weil, has involved a stormy six-year public debate. It is a good example of the awe- some challenge confronting those who would plan and develop a city with such deep religious, historic and emotional attachments. The Mamilla Quarter has undergone radical changes in the last few decades. Forty years ago, it was the bustling west- - ern entrance to the Old City of Jerusalem, con- taining shops, hotels and cafes. After the War of Indepen- dence in 1948 it became a border area between the two parts of the divided city.- Then for 19 years, it fell into decay. The one- and two-story buildings were used as cheap garages and workshops, and the few Grant Offered for Wiesenthal Center Project LOS ANGELES (JTA) — The Simon Wiesenthal Cen- ter here has received $41,000 challenge grant to help apply a transfer dupli- cation process to its multi- media Holocaust presenta- tion, "Genocide." The $41,000 grant was made by the Atlantic Richfield Foundation which requires Wiesenthal Center supporters to raise an addi- tional $100,000 to qualify for the $41,000, officials said. "Genocide," three years in the making, has been praised in reviews from two private showings held here in October. It is narrated by Elizabeth Taylor and Orson Welles. NCCJ President Asks Release of Refugees NEW YORK — Dr. David Hyatt, president of the Na- tional Conference of Chris- tians and Jews, has wired President Reagan and At- torney General William French Smith calling for the "immediate release" of Hai- tian refugees currently being held in detention camps in four states and Puerto Rico. Dr. Hyatt termed it "un- conscionable" for the United States to force'the refugees "to languish in de- tention camps while con-_ cerned and caring-people in America have expressed willingness to provide them with homes and jobs." residential buildings in the Israel, these will have to be relatively small and simple. area were inhabited by the • poor. Building costs for the project will not be borne by Shortly after the reunifi- the Israeli taxpaper. The cation of the city in 1967, it was decided that, in view of only cost to the public will be for the land itself, which its importance in the heart the government has fi- of the city, Mamilla should nanced. be redeveloped. Local and foreign con- The government ex- tractors will be allocated propriated most of the area and established the sections of the project, Karta Corp. which set which they will construct about evicting the 365 with their own financing. Various major U.S. families, workshops and contractors, such as small businesses, and ar ranging for a com- James Raus, have al- prehensiye development ready-shown interest in being involved in the plan. The plan which Safdie work. It is expected that and Weil came up with will the underground park- radically alter the 'face of ing garage alone will cost Mamilla. It calls for the de- something in the region molition of almost all the of $20 million. The outline plan, which run-down buildings in the area, while leaving intact 'recently received final ap- proval from the district the beautiful Convent Hos- pice of St. Vincent de Paul planning committee, is sig- and the street frontage nificantly different from the plan which was first pre- alongside it. In place will be built a sented in 1975. The original plan pro- commercial precinct with multi-level shopping ar- voked strong public pro- cades, underground park- tests, and led to the resigna- ing space for 1,800 cars, a tion of the then deputy 400-room hotel complex and mayor in charge of urban a 240-unit residential area. -planning, Meron Ben- The total floor space will be venisti. He flatly rejected about 130,000 square the plan, while Mayor meters, just under half of Teddy Kollek supported it. The argument centered which will be for commer- on a wide range of issues. cial and office use. Firstly, the proposal to de- The planners believe that the project will convert molish almost all of the existing buildings aroused Mamilla into a flourishing link of urban activity be- the ire of preservation- conscious Jerusalemites tween the Old City and Western Jerusalem, creat- and of people who have seen the failure of the "demolish ing a firm bond between the western and eastern parts of antl rebuild" approach to urban renewal in other the city. The parking areas will parts of the world. The planners argued serve a dual purpose — on weekdays they will be that their approach was the only way to make the used by people coming both to Mantilla and the project financially viable and that, anyway, most of Old City, and on weekends they will serve the building stock in the mainly the visitors to the area was of limited ar- chitectural value. Old City. Secondly, the plan con- Through the center of Mamilla runs a valley tained a proposal for 500 meters of underground which connects with the bi- roadway, most of it blical Hinnom Valley going alongside the Old City down to the side of the an- walls. cient city of David. Conservationists and ar- The Mamilla plan keeps cheologists claimed that the valley open as a central spine, thus also forging a this would damage the foundations of the ancient, link between the open-space walls and would deprive system of the.'western city and national-park around drivers and passengers of the lovely panorama the Old City. Building heights on the encompassing the Hinnom Valley, the Old City walls northern and southern sides of the valley will be graded and the Tower of David. The underground road so that they emphasize the shape of the valley, ranging also meant that the project would have to be built as from two stories in the val- ley floor to seven stories at one major operation and the top along . King David could not be broken down into stages. Thus, this im- Street. portant area in the center of An important, element Jerusalem would remain an in the landscape design is ugly building site for years the emphasis on green- on end. ery. The entire roof of the As a result of public underground parking pressure, the plan was garage will be covered changed to eliminate the with plants, while the rest underground roads, and of the area will contain acoherent stage-by-stage nunperous parks and gardens, especially along plan. was introduced, be- ginning with the Jaffa the valley. The plan also calls for Gate project and includ- water fountains to be intro- ing the main"600-car un- derground parking gar- duced at various points, al- though, due to the heat, age. A further point of criti- shortage of water and maintenance problems in - cism was that the sheer Fri*, lloierttiet21,; 1 1981I !69 Yeshiva Museum Receives Second mass of building proposed was far too great for such a politically sensitive area of Jerusalem. The planners, however, claimed that a More modest plan would make the project eco- nomically unviable. Eylon Meromi, architect and manager of the project in Safdie's Jerusalem office, admitted that "public pres- sure, along with bther fac- tors, have had a favorable effect on the improvement of the project." Thus, Mamilla awaits its new fate. Most of the build- ings are shuttered up with signs on the doors proclaim- ing "Entry Forbidden." If the Mamilla plan suc- ceeds in its objectives, the quarter will once again be- come the bustling western entrance to the Old City. Choose always the way that seems best. NEW YORK — The Yeshiva University Museum was recently awarded its second grant from the Institute of Museum Services at the Department of Education in Washington. The funds will be used, in French Epitaph? PARIS (ZINS) — Baron Guy de Rothschild last- week wrote a bitter attack against the Mitterrand gov- ernment's plans to nationalize France's private banks. Rothschild, writing in Le Monde, said there will be little left of the House of Rothschild. He recalled the family's financial losses under the nationalization of Petain. "Jews under Petain, out- casts under Francois Mit- terrand, for me this is enough," he wrote. part, to expand the educa- tional programs. To aid visitor apprecia- tion, part of the grant will be used to train 12 volun- teer guides. In addition, a new educational kit will be produced that will provide a complete curriculum on ag- ricultural and archeological life in ancient Israel to ac- company the museum's cur- rent exhibit "Daily Life in Ancient Israel." 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