this house was built by an underrated Russian Israeli architect by the name Yegosha Tabchnik. He graduated architecture in the Odessa institute for architecture. During his studying, he lived in British Palestine for about a year, and decided to move here. He gained popularity among the architect community fairly quickly, but he wasn’t accepted due to his overly “biblical styled architectural orientation”. Palm trees, Stars of David, and Menorahs were common in his designs, and due to his lack of acceptance here in British Palestine he moved to live the rest of his life in Brooklyn. To this day, his name causes tangling and interest in the Israeli architecture community.
From Lev HaYir parking to the Carmel market through Nakhalat Binyamin - the Friday market of handcraft: glass, wood, metal, ceramics. Jewelers and craftsmen, performances of street musicians, restaurants and cafes, children and adults. This partially restored, partially destroyed quarter of the old Tel Aviv has its own atmosphere of a carefree unhurried good neighborhood.