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Travel

Viva Tel Aviv, a city of endless reinvention

We sample the ever-shifting delights of Israel’s most dynamic city .

October 15, 2009 10:57
The Jacuzzi in the presidential suite at the Sheraton City Tower

ByJenni Frazer, Jenni Frazer

4 min read

It’s midnight outside the Tel Aviv Cinematheque and the place is humming. The last cinema-goers have left but the open courtyard in front is suddenly a mass of wheels — bicycles and trollies, but most of all rollerskates.

It’s the first night of the new winter season for the city’s intrepid rollerskaters, all of whom are knee-padded and helmeted as they prepare to swoop through the Tel Aviv streets. There are dozens of them, and as they finally zip off down Allenby Street, the watching taxi drivers grin and raise a good luck thumb while the skaters weave in and out of the late-night traffic.

One of the joys of Tel Aviv is that you never quite know what you will see when you turn a corner. The ever-inventive Tel Avivis are constantly coming up with new ways to enjoy their city, celebrating its 100th anniversary this year. A couple of nights before the skate-off, a breast cancer event had turned the whole of Rothschild Boulevard a day-glo pink with special neon lights and cerise balloons lining the whole of this very long city centre street. Rothschild is home to some of the White City’s most beautiful Bauhaus buildings — but for one night only it was part of the Pink City.

Rothschild is a good place to get the feel of this sprawling, noisy, vivid and buzzy city. Start off at YoGo, a designer frozen yoghurt joint at number 19 and stroll up the avenue, admiring the Italianate villa which is home to Israel’s Sotheby’s auction house. According to Time Out Tel Aviv, a must-read publication, a favourite activity for locals is to invest in a bottle of local cava at La Champa, on nearby Nachalat Binyamin, and stage an impromptu urban street party on any of Rothschild’s street corners.