Heneine Palace
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33°53′41″N 35°29′48″E / 33.894689666295946°N 35.496530452120886°E
| Heneine Palace | |
|---|---|
| Native name قصر حنين (Arabic) | |
![]() Interactive map of Heneine Palace | |
| Location | Zuqaq al-Blat, Beirut, Lebanon |
| Architectural styles | Alhambra, Mamluk |
Heneine Palace (Arabic: قصر حنين, romanized: Qasr hunin) is a late-19th-century palace in the Zuqaq al-Blat quarter of Beirut, Lebanon. The building is noted for its Ottoman-period architecture with decorated interiors influenced by the Alhambra and Mamluk motifs. It has been the subject of preservation concern and was placed on the World Monuments Fund Watch list of endangered sites in 2016.[1][2][3]
Heneine Palace stands in Zuqaq al-Blat, historically a bourgeois garden district on the outskirts of old Beirut that later urbanized into a residential quarter. The palace is considered one of the most remarkable surviving buildings in that neighbourhood.[4][5]
History
The palace is dated to the late 19th century, built during the final decades of Ottoman rule in Beirut. Attribution of the original builder varies; some accounts attribute the house Konstanty or Kazimierz Podhorski, while other accounts point to alternate owners or residents (including an exiled Russian noble). Over time, the building housed a number of notable residents and visitors, including physicians, artists and cultural figures.[6]
Architecture and layout
The palace's plan comprises a network of colonnaded halls, arcaded corridors, double-curved staircases and interior fountains; surfaces are extensively ornamented with geometric motifs, muqarnas, friezes and painted ceilings. Decorative inspiration for the ornamentation has been linked to the Alhambra and medieval Mamluk architecture. Internally, rooms with high, ornamented ceilings, slender columns and a central majlis area are notable.[7][8]
