Bulgur Palas
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The Bulgur Palas, originally known as the Bolulu Habip Bey Mansion, is a historical mansion located in
Istanbul Istanbul is the List of largest cities and towns in Turkey, largest city in Turkey, constituting the country's economic, cultural, and historical heart. With Demographics of Istanbul, a population over , it is home to 18% of the Demographics ...
, Turkey. It was restored and redeveloped into a library and cultural center for public use after its acquisition by the
Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality The Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality (, İBB) is the government agency in charge of the municipal affairs of the Istanbul Province. It is one of the 30 metropolitan municipalities in Turkey. History The Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality ...
in 2021.


Location

The Bulgur Palas is located on Kocamustafapaşa Hill, one of the
seven hills of Istanbul Istanbul is known as the ''City on the Seven Hills'' (). The city has inherited this denomination from Byzantine Constantinople which – consciously following the model of Rome – was built on seven hills too. The seven hills of Istanbul Th ...
, at Kargı Çıkmazı 5, in
Aksaray Aksaray () is a city in the Central Anatolia region of Turkey. It is the seat of Aksaray Province and Aksaray District.
in
Fatih Fatih () is a municipality and district of Istanbul Province, Turkey. Its area is 15 km2, and its population is 368,227 (2022). It is home to almost all of the provincial authorities (including the mayor's office, police headquarters, metro ...
, a municipality of Istanbul in Turkey.


History

The mansion was commissioned by Mehmet Habip Bey (1878–1926), a soldier and a deputy of
Bolu Bolu is a city in northern Turkey, and administrative center of the Bolu Province and of Bolu District,Committee of Union and Progress The Ottoman Committee of Union and Progress (CUP, also translated as the Society of Union and Progress; , French language, French: ''Union et Progrès'') was a revolutionary group, secret society, and political party, active between 1889 and 1926 ...
in the Ottoman Parliament of the Second Constitutional era (1908–1920), and designed in 1912 by Giulio Mongeri (1873–1951), a Levantine architect of Italian descent. The construction of the house, also called the Bolulu Habip Bey Mansion, was financed by the trade in grain and
bulgur Bulgur (; ; ; ), or Borghol (), is a cracked wheat foodstuff found in Egyptian cuisine, South Asian cuisine and West Asian cuisine. Characteristics Bulgur is distinct from cracked wheat, which is crushed wheat grain that, unlike bulgur, has ...
, a cracked wheat foodstuff, during World War I. Habip Bey was arrested after the
Armistice of Mudros The Armistice of Mudros () ended hostilities in the Middle Eastern theatre between Ottoman Turkey and the Allies of World War I. It was signed on 30 October 1918 by the Ottoman Minister of Marine Affairs Rauf Bey and British Admiral Somerset ...
in 1918, and exiled to Malta in 1919, leaving construction unfinished. As a result of financial difficulties he encountered during that period, the house was mortgaged to the Ottoman Bank as security for a loan. After his sudden death in 1926 from a heart attack, the building was transferred to the Ottoman Bank as collateral for the family's debts. For a period of time, the mansion was used as a bank archive, and its three apartments as residences for bank employees and their families. A downstairs room was reserved as a birdhouse for hundreds of domestic canaries, which were probably raised to live in the branches of the Ottoman Bank. The building was later abandoned. In 1955, the mansion became the target of looting during the
Istanbul pogrom The Istanbul pogrom, also known as the Istanbul riots, were a series of state-sponsored anti-Greek mob attacks directed primarily at Istanbul's Greek minority on 6–7 September 1955. The pogrom was orchestrated by the governing Democrat ...
because of the non-Muslim families living there at that time and the non-Turkish character of the Ottoman Bank. The building remained under the ownership of the Ottoman Bank and passed in 2001 into the ownership of Garanti Bank, which had acquired the Ottoman Bank. In 2021, the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality purchased the Bulgur Palas, and began efforts to restore the building, intending to open it to the public as a document center, archive, library, exhibition hall, and café. The building was opened to visitors on 28 February 2024.


Architecture

Mongeri's design exhibits traces of the First national architectural movement. The building consists of three full floors and one half floor. According to the current owner, the building has five floors. There is also an observation terrace. The main body of the building is constructed with unplastered red brick, and only the part with the towers is plastered. There is a railing-free deck around the domed roof at the top. The mansion is surrounded by extremely high walls. Bulgur Palas features of covered space in 81 independent sections, a open area, a outbuilding, and a ornamental pool. The newly established library section with 150-seat capacity contains about 25,000 books and documents. File:Istanbul_near_Cerrah_Pasha_mosque_2015_9927.jpg, Bulgur Palas (June 2015) File:Bulgur_Palas_2.jpg, During Restoration (September 2023)


References


External links

{{commons category, Bulgur Palace First Turkish National architecture Giulio Mongeri buildings Mansions in Turkey Buildings and structures completed in 1912 1912 establishments in the Ottoman Empire Libraries in Istanbul Fatih Redevelopment projects in Turkey
Bulgur Bulgur (; ; ; ), or Borghol (), is a cracked wheat foodstuff found in Egyptian cuisine, South Asian cuisine and West Asian cuisine. Characteristics Bulgur is distinct from cracked wheat, which is crushed wheat grain that, unlike bulgur, has ...