Jerusalem parks The Jerusalem Development Authority has proposed the creation of a network of green areas to surround the northern and eastern parts of the Old City of Jerusalem. The areas, totaling 2,500 dunams (600 acres) in size, would include bike paths and hiking paths making it possible to reach the
Pool of Siloam from
Mount Scopus. • The
King's Garden archeological park is a 12-acre park proposed for development in what is today the Arab neighborhood of al-Bustan in East Jerusalem's
Silwan neighborhood. The designated area is widely accepted as the site of the garden mentioned in the
Song of Songs book of the Hebrew Bible. The plan for the park calls for the demolition of 22 Palestinian homes constructed without permits on land originally zoned as parkland while legalizing 66 others. The Secretary General of the United Nations said the removal of the 22 homes would itself be illegal. • The Slopes of Mount Scopus national park is a 73.2-hectare (181-acre) park proposed for development in the hills between the Arab neighborhoods of
Isawiya and
at-Tur in East Jerusalem. Most of the land is privately owned by residents of the two neighborhoods. The proposal was opposed by city council member
Meir Margalit, who called it a pretext for the future establishment of
Israeli settlements. The Jerusalem Development Authority has said the park is important in order to preserve the Isawiya–a-Tur area's last remaining stretch of undeveloped land, to safeguard it from acts of vandalism, and to develop tourism. Within the framework of the project, by the summer of 2011 half of the Old City walls had undergone cleaning and restoration treatment. Six months of restoration work performed at
Zion Gate culminated in a moving rededication ceremony in July 2008 attended by veterans of the
Palmach, 468 years after the gate had originally been built. Two months of restoration work performed at
Jaffa Gate were completed in April 2010, and an official rededication ceremony was held to mark the occasion, 472 years after the gate was first dedicated. The restoration of
Herod's Gate was completed in June 2010, whereupon a reinauguration ceremony was held attended by the Old City's
Nawar mukhtar, Abed-Alhakim Mohammed Deeb Salim. The restoration work at
Damascus Gate, lasting more than a year and completed in August 2011, involved the reconstruction of part of a crenellated turret damaged in the Six-Day War. The project, lasting a total of five years, was declared complete in September 2012 after restoration work performed at
Lions' Gate – the seventh and last gate to be restored – was concluded.
Einstein museum In 2012 the
Israeli Cabinet approved the establishment in Jerusalem of a museum dedicated to the legacy of
Albert Einstein. A joint project of Hebrew University and the Jerusalem Development Authority, the museum will showcase thousands of documents currently stored at Hebrew University illustrating among other things Einstein's extensive involvement in the Zionist movement in the 1900s.
Safdie Plan The Safdie Plan was a project initiated by the
Israel Land Administration and the Jerusalem Development Authority during the term of
Ehud Olmert as mayor of Jerusalem. It called for the construction of 20,000 housing units on undeveloped land to the west of the city. Environmentalists mobilized to have the Safdie Plan scrapped, and it was suspended by Mayor
Uri Lupolianski in 2007. == See also ==