Kaplan Street

Coordinates: 32°4′23.17″N 34°47′11.68″E / 32.0731028°N 34.7865778°E / 32.0731028; 34.7865778
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

An aerial view of Sarona.

Kaplan Street is a major thoroughfare in central Tel Aviv, Israel, running from the Azrieli Center interchange on its eastern edge, to Ibn Gabirol Street on its western edge.

History

Named after

Sarona, which has undergone a major renovation programme, in addition to the street itself, which has been widened in recent years.[citation needed
]

The Israeli Intelligence Community had offices on this street.[1]

Starting January 14, 2023, Kaplan Street became the site of weekly protests of Israel's proposed and enacted judicial overhaul.[2]

  • Grounds of the Templer buildings in the Sarona colony on Kaplan Street
    Grounds of the
    Templer buildings in the Sarona colony
    on Kaplan Street
  • Grounds of the Templer buildings in the Sarona colony on Kaplan Street
    Grounds of the Templer buildings in the Sarona colony on Kaplan Street
  • Beit Yachin (Yachin House) in Kaplan Street
    Beit Yachin (Yachin House) in Kaplan Street
  • Kaplan street (renewed)
    Kaplan street (renewed)
  • Azrieli mall
    Azrieli mall
  • Jewish Agency for Israel Building
  • Dizengoff Center. Castro (clothing), SuperPharm and Orange (telecommunications) signs are noticeable
    Orange (telecommunications)
    signs are noticeable

See also

References

  1. ^ Bergman, Ronen (30 January 2018). Rise and Kill First: The Secret History of Israel's Targeted Assassinations. Random House.
  2. ^ Shimoni, Ran; Maltz, Judy; Hashmonai, Adi; Kaplan Sommer, Allison; Yefet, Nati; Freidson, Yael (4 February 2023). "'The Time to Be Polite Is Over': Israelis Rally Against Netanyahu's 'Regime Change' for Fifth Consecutive Week". Haaretz. Archived from the original on 4 February 2023. Retrieved 6 September 2023. The Tel Aviv protests, which counted 40,000 people, were concentrated in two different areas. The main stage on Kaplan street saw speeches from Mayor Ron Huldai, high-tech entrepreneur Hagai Stadler, chairwoman of the Aguda – Israel's LGBT Task Force Hila Pe'er and journalist Or-ly Barlev.

External links

32°4′23.17″N 34°47′11.68″E / 32.0731028°N 34.7865778°E / 32.0731028; 34.7865778