The Petit Serail was conceived as a civic centre in accordance with the
Tanzimat reforms and the Beirut Municipality’s urban development plan of 1878. The northern edge of
Sahet el-Bourj was selected for its strategic position at the core of the expanding extramural city. Commissioned by Beirut’s mayor Ibrahim Fakhri Bey, construction commenced in 1881 on the site of an earlier saray ordered demolished by the
wali Hamdi Pasha. The building was executed by
Bechara Effendi Avedissian, chief engineer of the Vilayet of Syria, and Youssef Effendi Khayat, engineer of the city of Beirut. The Petit Serail was formally inaugurated in 1884, three years after construction began. Under the
French Mandate, the urban planner De La Halle proposed the enlargement of al-Bourj Square and the construction of a new governmental complex. His 1939 plan envisaged the demolition of the Petit Serail to open visual and physical access between the square and the waterfront through a series of landscaped terraces. Although the proposal was formulated during the Mandate period, the demolition was carried out only in 1950, following Lebanon’s
independence. The projected clearing of the square was subsequently abandoned, and the Regent Hotel and the Rivoli building were erected on the site in 1953. ==Function==