The Beirut Central District contains over 60 gardens, squares and open spaces. These spaces comprise landscaped streets, gardens, historical squares, pedestrian areas and sea promenades thus totaling to an area of of open spaces. This makes the BCD home to 50% of the entire public spaces in Beirut, despite the fact that the BCD itself is only 10% of
Beirut City.
National Unity Square National Unity Square is a landscaped design garden on the southern slope of the
Serail Hill. The garden was originally designed by Vladimir Djurovic in basalt stone; the project was completed in 2009. The garden was conceptualized in a cascading manner as to cope with the sloping nature of the area's topography. The Russian sculptor Maguerditch Mazmanian presented a statue of
Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri depicting him as if walking through the garden. Elongated planes of gray stone and water mirrors, laid on a grass surface, step down towards the city. A row of
Jacaranda trees marks the edge between the steps and the
Grand Serail’s façade.
Khalil Gibran Garden This popular Beirut destination was named after the famous Lebanese-American Poet
Khalil Gibran. With an area of 6000 square meters, this garden was landscaped to emphasize its status as a main entrance to the city center. Its landscaped design consists of two circular lawns looking out into the garden and the UN House. Trees surround a blue water fountain and a brick-tiled platform, with six obelisks marking the gates of the garden. Sculptures of abstract art inspired by Khalil Gibran dot the location. The space also witnessed numerous political protests in the past years adding to the venue's strategic importance. It also hosts, since 2005, a permanent sit-in tent for the demand of the release of Lebanese prisoners in
Syria. in Beirut Central District
Omar Daouk Square The Omar Daouk Square is named after the Lebanese politician Omar beik Daouk. This 1,006 square meter square was designed by Mohammad Halawi around a bust by Maguerditch Mazmanian of Omar Daouk himself. The design of the Omar Daouk Square introduces three green terraces that soften the site incline, since it lies on the inclined Omar
Daouk Street. The trees and flowers surrounding it create an attractive open area where one can sit and rest.
Nejmeh Square Nejmeh Square, or Place de l'Étoile, is the central square in the Downtown area. It is home to the
Lebanese Parliament and its complementary buildings, two cathedrals, a museum, and several cafes and restaurants. The jewel of the square is a 1930s clock-tower with its four-faced
Rolex clock. The clock tower was a gift from Lebanese-Mexican émigré Michel Abed. Today, the square is filled with tourists and locals who come here to dine, walk or enjoy the street life. The square is also known for its noticeable population of pigeons. In 1994, archaeological diggings underneath the Saint George Greek Orthodox Cathedral in
Nejmeh Square identified structural elements of the ancient "Anastasis cathedral", but they were restricted to an area of and failed to unearth the interred
Law School of Berytus.
Waterside Park An ambitious future project, this park will be the largest park in the city of Beirut once completed. The original plans for the park included a prepared strip along its northwestern edge designed to accommodate the Formula One pits, and other temporary Formula One facilities during Grand Prix events. However, plans for the future Formula One circuit have been abandoned due to demands from the Formula One Committee.
Roman Baths Garden The "Roman Baths" is a landscaped public space that lies on the eastern slope of the
Serail Hill. It consists of a garden and a set of uncovered ruins of ancient
Roman baths, hence the name of the place. Originally discovered in 1968–69, the Garden's layout is dominated with low-slung glass walls and lookout platforms that can be turned into concert venues, thus giving a 21st-century touch without harming the area's historical fabric.
Sea Corniche Once the
Zaitounay Bay, the Corniche promenade, the Eastern Marina, and the
Beirut Port First Basin promenade are completed, the city center will provide an uninterrupted
corniche along Beirut's shoreline. This new addition will be four times the area of the existing
Corniche Beirut.
Castle Square Belvedere Park Situated in the
central business district of Beirut, "Castle Square Belvedere Park" is a public plaza adjacent to the oldest archaeological site in the city, the "Tell Area". The site, which includes findings that are over 6,000 years old, is the location of the ancient city of
Berytus, the
Roman origins of modern-day Beirut. The design of the square was conceived by the
Boston-based architecture and urban design firm
Machado and Silvetti in 2005. The centerpiece of the square is the "Beirut Citadel" which, although significantly reduced in size, still houses visible ruins including portions of a
medieval castle and an
Ottoman barrack.
Imam Ouzai Square The Imam Ouzai Square is part of the Beirut Souks project in the BCD. The square marks the main entrance to the souks from
Rue Weygand. The square's floor is tiled with black
basalt stone including an oval with outlines of the old
Roman pavement, and it hosts an old
olive tree in its center. Architecturally speaking, the design of the square integrates several features from its old heritage as well as several elements of modernity. A
cupola-topped prayer hall to the left creates a virtual entrance to the square by mirroring a
Mamluk-era shrine on the right. Some of the squares features are curved white marble planters surrounding Ibn Iraq monument, white marble circular planters with trees and shrubs; white marble circular steps guiding to Bab Idriss and the Souks upper floors; seating spaces facing the shop fronts, providing shade and emphasizing the entrance towards Souk Tawileh. The square also offers passages to Souk Sayyour and the Gold Souks.
Zeytouneh Square Situated at the southernmost point of the Shoreline Walk, Zeytouneh Square forms a key link connecting the different sectors of the central district. Designed by Gustafson-Porter, the company of renowned American
landscape architect and
artist Kathryn Gustafson, the 600-sq-meters square was inaugurated in 2011, after eight years of designing, planning and construction works. The surface of the Zeytouneh Square extends across the roads to the surrounding buildings, unifying the square as one large space. The bold paving patterns were inspired from the Black and White patterning found in traditional Lebanese houses, with the paving stripes changing with the topography of the landscape. Provided with free wireless internet access, the square's design was complemented with stone benches and
Albizia trees, to gradually help the square become a popular hangout place.
Samir Kassir Square A square on
Rue Weygand street in the Beirut Central District commemorating the late journalist and political activist
Samir Kassir. The square is located behind the
An-Nahar building, the renowned newspaper headquarters where Kassir used to work. The garden boasts a bronze statue of Kassir done by the French sculptor Louis Derbré. Two historic
ficus trees provide shade at the centre of the space, and a
reflecting pool with water cascading over its edges marks the border with the street. The pool is flanked by a rectangular
timber deck that encircles the two trees, and has at its western side a long bench of solid stone. The edges of the site have a ground cover of dwarf Natal plum (
carissa macrocarpa), a water-conserving plant known for its dark evergreen leaves and its white, star-shaped flowers and red berries which grow throughout the year.
Martyrs' Square Synonymous with Lebanon's
modern history, Martyrs' Square is a central, and biggest,
town square in Beirut and its central district. Initially named "Place des Canons", or "Cannons Square", it was built by the
Ottomans during their occupation of
Lebanon in the 19th century. During
World War I, Beirut suffered from a
blockade by the
Allies which was intended to starve the
Turks out; however, the result was a famine that killed a quarter of Lebanon's population. An unsuccessful revolt against the Turks broke out which resulted in the execution of Lebanese nationalists in the square on 19 May 1916, hence bestowing upon it its current name, "Martyrs' Square". The Square was completely destroyed in the
Lebanese Civil War, and reconstruction began in the early 1990s. The "Martyrs' Statue", the iconic bullet-riddled centerpiece of the square, was maintained and restored alongside the old
opera house. After the assassination of Prime Minister
Rafik Hariri, the square regained its original role as the "throbbing heart of the political life in Lebanon". The Square became
ground zero for the political
sit-ins, demonstrations, and protests of the
Cedar Revolution in 2005. Solidere commissioned the re-designing and landscaping of the square, after an international urban design competition for the Martyrs' Square axis was conducted by an international organization.
Khan Antoun Bey Square "Khan Antoun Bey Square" is an under-construction project located in the northern section of the Beirut Souks. The
Portuguese landscaping studio PROAP were selected as winners of the architectural landscaping contest, and were hence commissioned by Solidere to design the square. The square's master plan addresses the site's
history, location and surroundings, to develop its area as a link between the traditional city center and the newly constructed waterfront district. Once completed, the "Khan Antoun Bey Square" will be a major public
plaza where pedestrian routes from the BCD converge. The square is divided into two main areas, a lower plaza and a higher circulation plaza. The transition between the two levels occurs through a pedestrian lane shaping a natural amphitheater and event seating area. Historically, this area used to be a
loading dock connecting the
harbor with the
souqs. The square will pay tribute to this by including water features, re-installing the original harbor wall, and consolidating the remains of the ancient city wall with the square's design.
Rafik Hariri Memorial Garden The "Rafik Hariri Memorial Garden" is a public space in the
Saint George Bay neighborhood facing the
InterContinental Phoenicia Beirut Hotel. The garden pays tribute to the former
Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and the other 22 victims who died in the massive
car bomb attack on 14 February 2005 on the same site. The garden's construction was inaugurated on the third anniversary of the
assassination of Rafic Hariri in 2005. The memorial is a 700-square-meter replica of the garden of the Hariri family residence in Qoreitem, with water flowing from the edges of the site and a 6-meter bronze statue of the late premier on top. A bronze pole with a clock and inscriptions of verses from the
Lebanese National Anthem stands near Hariri's statue, and each day at 12:55 p.m. - the time of Hariri's killing - the clock emits the sounds of
church bells and the Islamic call to prayer for five minutes. In the same five minutes, a flame also rises from a 4-meter statue in the garden in the middle of five bronze Lebanese flags. ==Neighborhoods==