Israel Architecture Archive

The Israel Architecture Archive (IAA) is an archive collection in Tel Aviv, Israel that documents Israeli architectural culture and practice.[1] Since its establishment in 1995, the IAA has become a unique database on planning and building in Palestine and Israel from the late 19th century to the present.[2]

Israel Architecture Archive
Logo of the IAA (design: Noam Schechter).
Established1995
TypeArchive
Location

The IAA is located in the basement of the Shalom Mayer Tower, as a symbolic statement, as the tower was built on the site of the first Hebrew public building in Tel Aviv, the Herzliya Hebrew Gymnasium (established 1909). The demolition of the latter in 1959 was a landmark event in Hebrew culture that drew awareness to the need for preservation and documentation of the recent past.

History of the collection

The Herzeliya Hebrew Gymnasium, ca. 1930, later demolished to make place for the tower in which the IAA resides.

The IAA was initially conceived as a private collection by Zvi Elhyani, an architect and architectural historian, while still a student at the Architecture Department at the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design, Jerusalem in the mid-1990s.[3] The collection expanded significantly during Elhyani's graduate studies (MSc Arch. and PhD) at the Faculty of Architecture and Town Planning at the Technion, Haifa.

Over the years, the IAA collection became established, garnering increasing publicity and reputation. It consists of hundreds of thousands of items which continuously accumulate, collected from a variety of sources: active acquisition and purchase of relevant collections and single items, absorption of collections and items from owners, etc. As such, the IAA functions as a primary address for historical and rare materials which otherwise would have been lost and entirely disappeared. Since most other attempts to establish a central archive for building and architecture in Israel have failed, the IAA has become a storage place for documentary materials for architects and demolished and existing buildings which not only enfold chapters in the history of Israeli architecture, but also in its nation-building.

Views from IAA interior space.

References

  1. Elhyani, Zvi (8–9 November 2015), "Lost & Found: Digitizing Israel's Architectural Heritage", in Hazan, Susan; Winer, Dov (eds.), XIIth Annual Conference on the Digitization of Cultural Heritage, Van Leer Jerusalem Institute, p. 11
  2. "Israel Architecture Archive selected IDEA ARC". IDEA Information Systems. Retrieved 10 November 2015. External link in |publisher= (help)
  3. Dvir, Noam (3 August 2010). "Israeli Architecture's Lone Arranger". Haaretz. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
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