Property Description
1Bedroom Apartment For Sale On Ben Yehuda-Bugrashov
A New building ( 5 years old ) located steps from the beach.
The apartment is located right in the city center, 5 minute walk to Dizengoff st.
The area has a variety of cafes, restaurants, Bars and Shops .
- 2 Rooms
- 1 Bedroom
- 38 Sqm
- 2nd Floor
- Huge windows with double glazing
- ” REGBA ” luxury kitchen
- The bedroom is a (safe room) with a window
- Granite flooring
- Central air conditioning
- Elevator
- Arnona (for two months) – 450 NIS
- Maintenance fee – 250 NIS
Asking Price:
1,975,000 NIS
Neighborhood Information:
Ben Yehuda Street is a street in Tel Aviv, Israel.
The street runs from an intersection with Allenby Street, northwards intersecting where it runs roughly with the sea front to the west and Dizengoff Street to the east.
At the northernmost end, the joins with Dizegoff Street, near Yarkon Park.
The street is named after the founder of Modern Hebrew, the Litvak lexicographer and newspaper editor Eliezer Ben-Yehuda.
Tel Aviv Promenade commonly referred to in Hebrew simply as the Tayelet, runs along the Mediterranean seashore in Tel Aviv, Israel.
History:
In the late 1930s, the city council decided to build a promenade for separation between bathing areas and hiking or promenading paths. It extended from Bugrashov beach to where Geula beach is located now. The introduction of the promenade was a turning point in common perception of the city’s coastline.
At the same time, World War II started in September 1939, and the British Mandate Regime prohibited bathing in the beach. As a result of that, the city’s beaches were abandoned and neglected. In addition, the developing new city was pouring its sewage to the sea and the beaches were banned for bathing for sanitary reasons. Seaside hotels and cafés were turning into questionable bars, gambling joints and brothels. The public abstained from the area, and the city’s recreational centers were transferred to the city center, to areas such as Dizengoff Street. In 1942, London Square was founded in the northern part of the promenade. In 1953, Gan-haAtsmaut (Independence Garden) was founded on the gravel hill above Hilton beach.

















