Tel Aviv attractions offer variety, quality and excitement. In a city that is walkable in scale there are historical, cultural, entertainment and tourist attractions. Packed in like a puzzle with pieces from all around the globe in different vintage and style. A blend of Mediterranean and European architectural design gives the city a resort feel with a blend of culture topped with a buzz all around the clock. We categorized the city by section, attraction topic and personal interest category. First time in Tel Aviv? Focus on the beach area: Tel Aviv's tourist section. Explore Tel Aviv's artistic side in Neveh Tzedek: from small boutiques and studios to restaurants with international flavors. Tel Aviv's center is filled with 1920's Bauhaus architectural gems unique to this city, preserved in a European architectural design. Tel Aviv's center is compact and walkable, here are galleries, shops and historical museums depicting Israel's history. The Tel Aviv Israel museum has a collection of items going back to Phoenician glass and Roman ceramics to modern Israeli painters and sculptors. Old Jaffa is a mix of Arab heritage in shopping and dining with modern Israeli artists and craftsmen. Boutiques, theaters, cafes and music bars are open late and the crowd is eclectic. Come here for a view of the east you will not see anywhere else.
Tel Aviv is also a wonderful place to enjoy a vacation or entertain friends and colleagues for dinner. Do you want to jog along a stream in a green park? How would a swim in the sea year round or a brisk kayak ride? Is your style luxury? Tel Aviv offers world class shopping with an artistic flair. Along Dizengoff street you will find a shopping mall on one side, shops, restaurants and cafes of all kind in the middle, and locally designed jewelry and clothing boutiques in the norther end. At night Tel Aviv is humming with music from classical to eastern, hip-hop to jazz. Israel's music makers blend their own specialty of style and there is plenty of classical and western music.
This site will help you organize your trip with an eye to the right place to hotel stay and the appropriate things to do. Look at the city in sections, search the attractions you like. If you want to explore, there are plenty of interesting attractions not found in most cities. Tel Aviv's location in the seam between east and west has plenty to offer.
Should you wish to know more about Tel Aviv we highly recommend you visit the City Guide
Website.
|
Neve Tzedek |
Neve Tzedek is located in the southern part of the Yemenite Quarter in Tel Aviv and it’s regarded as one of the most beautiful neighborhoods in the city. It’s also the oldest neighborhood to be built dating back to 1887.Currently; Neve Tzedek is regarded as one of the most stylish metropolitan being home to the countries’ yuppies and artists.
|
|
|
|
|
Old Jaffa |
There is a controversy surrounding the naming of this neighborhood. There are those who argue that it was named after Noah’s son, Japheth. It’s believed that he is the one who built it after the infamous floods that rocked the country. There are others who argue that the neighborhood got its name from the Hebrew word “Yofi” which translates to beauty.
|
|
|
|
|
Tel Aviv Bauhaus |
Bauhaus, or the white city of Tel Aviv is a metropolitan that boasts the largest groupings of buildings built in international style. These buildings were designed and built by renowned Scot; Sir Patrick Geddes . The white city has about 4,000 buildings constructed in the 1930s until 1948 when Israel became a sovereign state.
|
|
|
|
|
Shopping |
Tel Aviv is long time known for its taste for fashion. From boutique to designers and world class brands, all of which you can find in Tel Aviv. The Tel Aviv Port, Dizengoff Street and Kikar Ha'medina are just some of the places you can can start your shopping spree in and enjoy the wealth and richness of fashion from different cultures.
|
|
|
|
|
Night Life |
Tel Aviv has a wonderful night scene. This is one attraction no one visiting the city should miss. There are over a hundred bars and more than a hundred good restaurants all over the city.
|
|
|
|
|
Art & Culture |
Above all Tel Aviv is a modern city. Only 100 years old and mostly built after 1945. The city was built in short burst which gives it the city it's section by section division. Tel Aviv is the seam between eastern and western traditions
|
|
|
|
|
Markets |
Tel Aviv's Shook Ha'carmel (open air market in south of the city) is the main open air market. It is a hive of stalls and shops packed into a small area. Travelers compare it to the big shooks (Arabic for market) found in Marrakesh in Morocco and Camden Market in London
|
|
|
|