Tag: Grand Bazaar

  • High-End Hamam Opens in Historic Istanbul Location

    High-End Hamam Opens in Historic Istanbul Location

    By SUSANNE FOWLER

    The Aya Sofya Hurrem Sultan Hamam in Istanbul recently went through a $10 million restoration.Ayasofya Hurrem Sultan HamamThe Ayasofya Hurrem Sultan Hamam in Istanbul recently went through a $10 million restoration.

    Ayasofya Hurrem Sultan HamamThe Ayasofya Hurrem Sultan Hamam in Istanbul recently went through a $10 million restoration.
    Ayasofya Hurrem Sultan HamamThe Ayasofya Hurrem Sultan Hamam in Istanbul recently went through a $10 million restoration.

    For years the domed structure between the Aya Sofia (Hagia Sophia) and the Blue Mosque was used as a state-run carpet shop. Kilims and halis were strewn every which way across marble navel stones under huge domes that let shafts of light illuminate the structure built in 1556 by the famed architect Sinan to house the baths of Roxelana, known locally as Hurrem. (Hurrem was the slave who became the powerful wife of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent.) Now, thanks to a $10 million restoration, the marble-clad space is once again a Turkish bath house, with separate facilities for men and women.

    There are far less expensive hamams in Istanbul, like the neighborhood facility on the Asian side, recently enjoyed by the Frugal Traveler, or the popular Cemberlitas near the Grand Bazaar. But the new Ayasofya Hurrem Sultan Hamam (Cankurtaran Mah. Bab-ı Hümayün Cad. No.1; 90-212-517-35-35) will appeal to anyone who is turned off by the musty odors and coarse towels often found elsewhere.

    At the Sultan Hamam, the changing rooms, steaming alcoves and scrubbing areas are spotless, with pleasant aromatherapy vapors wafting overhead. And instead of partially nude attendants, the workers here are covered: the women wear nifty turquoise halter tops and matching wrap skirts that evoke traditional pestemels, or Turkish bath towels. The quality and length of the exfoliation, soap-suds scrub, shampoo and massage are excellent, although there is no opportunity afterward to lounge about on the central slab to let the heat sink deeper into one’s muscles.

    After the basic service (for an “introductory’’ price of 70 euros, about $100, tip included), clients are wrapped in luxurious terrycloth bath sheets and led to a relaxation lounge where they are offered tall glasses of iced cucumber water or a sweetened tamarind or blackberry “sherbet’’ drink.

    Other, pricier, treatment options include a bridal service with a full-body clay mask and a henna party for the bride’s girlfriends and a new-mother-and-child bath incorporating 41 different spices.

    via High-End Hamam Opens in Historic Istanbul Location – NYTimes.com.

  • Buying gold? Try Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar

    Buying gold? Try Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar

    In these austere economic times, many have sought refuge for their savings in gold.

    Gold rose to record highs last week but it’s not just on the financial markets where people are looking to protect their wealth.

    In Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar, traders have been buying and selling gold since 1461, the early days of the Ottoman Empire. Its shops attract between 250,000 and half a million visitors annually.

    One Moroccan tourist on a visit to the market told euronews the quality of gold varies from one store to another, but the prices are usually good. “Nevertheless, I always negotiate,” he said.

    An estimated 22 billion euros worth of gold is traded at the Grand Bazaar each year.

    Bora Bayraktar, Euronews’ correspondent in Istanbul said “Grand Bazaar is one of the important places where gold has been exchanged for 550 years. Even today, daily 2.5 tonnes of junk gold is brought here for processing.”

    Copyright © 2011 euronews

    via Buying gold? Try Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar | euronews, world news.

  • The Beauty of Trade at the Grand Bazaar

    The Beauty of Trade at the Grand Bazaar

    By Doug French

    The Grand Bazaar in Istanbul has been a beehive of mutually beneficial exchanges for 550 years. Americans may think of Rodeo Drive or Madison Avenue when they think shopping, but while everyone pays the sticker price in America, price tags are rare at the Grand Bazaar.

    Show any interest in an item at one of the 4,300 shops in the bazaar and the proprietor or store employee will engage you immediately. If English is your language and he doesn’t speak it, in seconds someone will appear who does. This shopping experience isn’t anything like a leisurely stroll through Walmart, where you only occasionally spot blue-smock- and big-button-wearing employees.

    With thousands of choices, shopkeepers try a variety of come-ons to get passing shoppers to look at their wares. Some make you feel foolish: “You look lost, come in my shop.” Others make you laugh: “Let me sell you something you don’t need,” or “Cheaper than Walmart!” And then there’s the appeal to the shopper’s ego: “You look like a professional rug buyer. Come and see my selection.”

    American tourists may think they’re good negotiators, but they’re at a distinct disadvantage in the Grand Bazaar. The bargaining can take place in three currencies and skip back and forth.

    Not knowing whether a buyer is holding Turkish lire, euros, or US dollars, sellers were initially quoting prices in lire (this was not the case when I was first there in 2006, when they preferred euros). But when I produced my money clip containing euros, the shopkeeper quickly switched. I thought I had shut him down, not finding a shirt offering adequate neck girth, but he told me to hold still and sprinted down one of the bazaar’s 58 covered streets, deftly dodging shoppers. He was back in a flash, producing four shirts, and he peeled one of the packages open so I could try it on and see if the size was right.

    It was. There was no going back. The 90-lira quote was now €60. That day a lira only brought €0.44. So the initial offering price had gone up considerably. However, I was thinking in dollars. The shirt he was trying to sell me goes for about $150 in the states. That day, €1 fetched $1.46. Seemed like a smoking deal to me. How could I buy just one? Despite not being an impulse buyer, I walked out with the four shirts for €180.

    Feeling satisfied after buying shirts I probably didn’t need, I did require a pair of sunglasses. A shop just down the corridor sold nothing but. My friendly shirt seller followed me there. The sunglasses sellers also first offered prices in lire, but the shirt seller said something to them in Turkish that I didn’t understand. He then looked at me and said, “These guys are friends of mine. I told them to give you a good deal.”

    I suspect it may have been just the opposite.

    There are hundreds of thousands of negotiations going on under the roof of the 47,000 square meter bazaar each minute up until closing time. The Turkish monetary authorities have a history of debauching their currency so Turks store their wealth in gold and rugs. It’s no surprise there are 373 jewelers and 125 rug stores in the bazaar. Souvenir shops are also prominent (217), as are shops selling leather goods (114).[1]

    In 1966, one US dollar bought 9 lire. By 2001, a dollar bought 1.65 million lire. Four years later, six zeros were lopped off the lira and a dollar equaled 1.29 new Turkish lire. Today, a dollar can be traded for around 1.60 lire.

    The last half-decade of tamer inflation has helped make the Turkish economy one of the strongest. However, Ahmet Akarli, an economist at Goldman Sachs in London, tells The Economist, “The cyclical picture is looking ugly, imbalances are accumulating and financial vulnerabilities are growing.” Akarli says wages are up 18 percent, domestic demand is increasing 25 percent, and credit growth is 30 to 40 percent.

    Buying jewelry and rugs can take hours. Shop owners are friendly and recognize a tired and thirsty spouse immediately, producing a stool and water so that an impatient husband won’t get in the way of trade. While less expensive goods are quickly negotiated, one can spend all afternoon dickering over handmade carpets and jewels.

    Hakan Evin is one of these friendly merchants; he has been selling rugs for nearly three decades despite not having turned 40. Profiled in the Hurriyet Daily News, Evin sold his first rug at age 12 and competes against his father and brother, who have another store. He works from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., six days a week. The bazaar is closed on Sunday. Hillary Clinton buys her rugs from Mr. Evin and sends him plenty of customers. George H.W. Bush, Demi Moore, and Eric Clapton are also customers.

    The area near the Grand Bazaar is the heart of the jewelry sector — not just in selling jewelry but making it as well. The master-apprentice relationships known as the Covered Bazaar train thousands of Armenian craftsmen in jewelry manufacture. The work is exacting and painstaking. A calm demeanor and steady hands are required.

    The wooden workbenches look to be ancient, with decades’ worth of craftsmen’s initials carved into the benches. A leather sort of basket is attached so as to catch any stray gold flakes or precious stones. I was told there are buyers for the sewer water from the bazaar district, because enough gold finds its way there.

    Even on the quietest day, $20 million changes hands between the 250,000 to 400,000 tourists and the 30,000 workers employed in the bazaar. Three of the five daily calls to prayer occur while the bazaar is operating, but no one stops to pray; there is business to be done.

    Experts in these matters say stores in the bazaar offer some of the best purses anywhere. A New York Times reviewer of Kiyici Genuine Fake Bags writes,

    Just because these are not the originals doesn’t mean they’re of inferior quality or you’re not going to need a full wallet to walk out of here with a little morsel. GFB carries Prada (with bargaining that begins at $250/£125), Louis Vuitton, and other big names.

    Sadly, Istanbul police recently raided 137 shops in the Grand Bazaar, looking for what the press called counterfeit goods: “Sacks of counterfeit goods, particularly handbags, watches and scarves, were confiscated,” reports the Hurriyet Daily News.

    However, commerce was moving along at full bore when we visited more than a month after this raid. The Grand Bazaar’s construction started in 1455, and it opened in 1461. It was most likely built next to the site of the market used by the Byzantines. Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror ruled Constantinople (now Istanbul) when the bazaar was built. It was vastly enlarged in the 16th century, during the reign of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, and in 1894 underwent a major restoration following an earthquake. An earthquake in 1999 also damaged the bazaar. Time marches on while exchange continues.

    People trade to make their lives better. And this temple of trade has thrived for centuries. If earthquakes can’t shut the Grand Bazaar down, surely the intellectual-property police can’t stop the mutual satisfaction of wants.

    Douglas French is president of the Mises Institute and author of Early Speculative Bubbles & Increases in the Money Supply. He received his masters degree in economics from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, under Murray Rothbard with Professor Hans-Hermann Hoppe serving on his thesis committee. See his tribute to Murray Rothbard. Send him mail. See Doug French’s article archives.

  • Fighting Entropy to Salvage Istanbul’s Historic Bazaar

    Fighting Entropy to Salvage Istanbul’s Historic Bazaar

    By SUSANNE GÜSTEN

    A view from Kalpakcilar Street inside the Grand Bazaar. Built in 1461, it remains a center of commerce, but it needs structural repairs.
    A view from Kalpakcilar Street inside the Grand Bazaar. Built in 1461, it remains a center of commerce, but it needs structural repairs.

    ISTANBUL — When the rain began again in Istanbul this month, Osman Varli, a carpet seller in the city’s Grand Bazaar, cast an anxious glance to the vaulted ceilings outside his shop. “I’m really getting worried here,” he said, pointing to the moldy and decaying columns supporting the graceful vaults. When it rains, water streams down the pillars from the leaking roof and runs down the lane like a river through a ravine. “Those pillars won’t last much longer,” Mr. Varli said, poking at one of the columns with a disdainful finger. “Look, just scratch with your fingernail and it dissolves.”

    Hasan Firat, president of the bazaar traders’ association, agrees that the leaking roof is the most urgent problem the historic bazaar faces in this, its 550th year. But there are plenty more.

    “So many things are old and outdated here,” Mr. Firat said during an interview this month in his office overlooking the bazaar’s roof, which bristles with weeds and air-conditioning units. “From the roof to the foundations, from the electric system to environmental hazards, this place urgently needs an overhaul.”

    Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar, built by the Ottoman sultan Mehmet the Conqueror in 1461, is visited by about 300,000 people most days, and half a million on busy ones. Approximately 25,000 people make their living in the bazaar, which boasts 3,600 shops selling items from Armenian antiques to tourist trinkets. It has its own post office, mosque and police and fire stations under its 39,000-square-meter, or 420,000-square-foot, roof.

    Yet when it comes to maintenance and repairs, there is no one in charge of this city within a city.

    “Yes, it is a world-famous cultural treasure,” said Mustafa Demir, the mayor of Istanbul’s Fatih district, which encompasses the historical peninsula on which the bazaar sits, “but it is also the private property of many individuals, and there is no organizational structure for solving common problems.”

    “This huge bazaar was forsaken, abandoned to its fate,” he said.

    Ownership of the Grand Bazaar is divided among some 2,500 shop owners, a majority of whom have held their deeds for generations, some dating to Ottoman times. Although most are members of the bazaar traders’ association, “we have no legal authority to raise money or award contracts,” said Mr. Firat, whose grandfather started as a bazaar porter in 1907.

    As a result, traders have been left to improvise, with hazardous results that are perhaps most visible in the garlands of electrical cables festooning the walls of the bazaar.

    “The market’s current power grid was installed in 1980, before we had high-voltage spotlights in the shop windows and refrigerators in the cafes and air-conditioners,” Mr. Firat said. “The bazaar is wired for 500 watt, but we are using 5,000.”

    Traders have tried to bridge the gap by running cables in from outside the market. “There are wires everywhere,” Mr. Demir, the mayor, acknowledged. “But there is still not enough power.”

    Inside the labyrinthine passageways of the bazaar, a couple of German tourists looked up to a rats nest of live wires dangling over a display of carpets.

    “Those rugs would catch fire quickly,” one of the tourists, Ingrid Schütz, said. “And it would be difficult to get people out of here in an emergency.”

    Fires have plagued the bazaar time and again over the centuries. The last major conflagration, attributed to an electrical problem, occurred in 1954. It burned for 28 days and destroyed more than 1,300 shops. The bazaar remained closed for repairs for six years, reopening in 1960 in its present-day state.

    A fire broke out on the outskirts of the bazaar in February, but was quickly contained. An electrical malfunction was the suspected cause of the blaze in market stalls along an outside wall of the bazaar, according to the Ihlas news agency.

    Still, the German couple said they would not let safety concerns spoil their enjoyment of the colorful market. Other western visitors seemed similarly unconcerned.

    “We cannot worry about quakes all the time,” said Anders Thomassen, a Norwegian consultant in town to sell earthquake relief equipment to the Turkish authorities.

    via Fighting Entropy to Salvage Istanbul’s Historic Bazaar – NYTimes.com.

  • Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar to celebrate its 550th anniversary

    Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar to celebrate its 550th anniversary

    ISTANBUL – Hürriyet Daily News

    The 550th birthday of the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul’s historical trade district Fatih will be celebrated with a ceremony on Sunday during which the pianist Tuluyhan Uğurlu will give a concert featuring music from his album “Forever Istanbul.”

    Certain parts of the historical Grand Bazaar need to be restored 'but tourists and tradesmen will not be disrupted by the work,' says Fatih Mayor Mustafa Demir. DAILY NEWS photo, Hasan ALTINIŞIK
    Certain parts of the historical Grand Bazaar need to be restored 'but tourists and tradesmen will not be disrupted by the work,' says Fatih Mayor Mustafa Demir. DAILY NEWS photo, Hasan ALTINIŞIK

    Fatih Municipality Mayor Mustafa Demir said the Grand Bazaar stands for values representing the common heritage of mankind and would host cultural events just as the Istanbul European Capital of Culture 2010 did this year.

    “After the conclusion of Istanbul European Capital of Culture activities this Sunday, the Grand Bazaar will take on the mission of offering a variety of activities every month,” Demir said during a press meeting held in the old covered bazaar, inviting Istanbul people to the first special event on Tuesday.

    The Shopping Festival is an event that will be offered within the scope of Grand Bazaar activities, said Demir, adding that shopping malls will offer 40 days and nights of shopping activities all around Istanbul from March 18 to April 30.

    Restoration work is also planned for the historical bazaar’s unique mosaics and domes. With support of the traders, 98 percent of whom are property owners, the municipality will begin restoration and renovation soon.

    “Through this project, we want to create a modern life center so that this bazaar can survive. The project will cost approximately 15 million Turkish Liras,” said Demir.

    He said restoration work would be covered in certain parts of the bazaar so tourists and tradespeople would not be disturbed and that a team of 20 architects and 20 logistics experts would contribute to the project.

    “Hopefully, the Grand Bazaar will take its new shape in 2012,” said Demir.

    Uğurlu will take the stage on Kalpakçılar Street at 3 p.m. on Sunday and said this would be his fifth performance in the Grand Bazaar.

    “Bringing music from the concert halls to historical sites not only gives me a feeling of déjà vu, but also rescues this type of music from the dominance of the elite,” said Uğurlu.

    Uğurlu has also given concerts at the historical Haydarpaşa and Sirkeci train stations, Beyazıt State Library and a variety of provinces in Turkey. Following Uğurlu’s performance, the Fatih Municipality’s mehter group will perform traditional Ottoman military music.

    Grand Bazaar

    The Grand Bazaar (Kapalıçarşı) in Istanbul is one of the largest covered markets in the world with 60 streets and 5,000 shops. It attracts between 250,000 and 400,000 visitors daily. It is well known for its jewelry, hand-painted ceramics, carpets, embroidered work, spices and antique shops. Many of the stalls in the bazaar are grouped by types of goods, with special areas for leather, gold, jewelry and much more.

    The bazaar has been an important trading center since 1461 and its labyrinth-like vaults feature two domed buildings, the first of which was constructed between 1455 and 1461 on the order of Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror. The bazaar was vastly enlarged in the 16th century, during the reign of Sultan Süleyman the Magnificent, and in 1894 underwent a major restoration following an earthquake.

    The complex houses two mosques, four fountains, two hamams, and several cafés and restaurants. In the center is the high-domed hall of the Cevahir Bedesten, where the most valuable items and antiques were to be found in the past, and still are today, including furniture, copperware, amber prayer beads, inlaid weapons and icons.

  • Tuluyhan Uğurlu concert to mark Grand Bazaar’s 550th anniversary

    Tuluyhan Uğurlu concert to mark Grand Bazaar’s 550th anniversary

    Turkish classical pianist-composer Tuluyhan Uğurlu will perform the first concert of his upcoming album later this month at İstanbul’s famous Grand Bazaar, news agencies reported last week.

    Uğurlu, best known for his thematic music that takes the history of İstanbul and Turkey as his subject matter, will kick off a series of celebrations marking the 550th anniversary of the historic building with a concert scheduled for Dec. 26.

    Uğurlu’s new album, titled “Sonsuza Kadar İstanbul” (İstanbul Forever), is a continuation of the composer’s 2006 work “Dünya Başkenti İstanbul” or “A World Capital — İstanbul,” which he has performed for audiences in around 250 concerts in Turkey and abroad, the Anatolia news agency reported.

    A customary characteristic of all Uğurlu concerts, a visual show that complements the music with snapshots of İstanbul, will again be featured during the Grand Bazaar concert, Anatolia said.

    The Grand Bazaar, built in 1461, during the rule of Sultan Mehmet II, will turn 550 in 2011, which will be celebrated with several cultural events at the historic building. The bazaar, one of the most significant tourist attractions of the old city, is normally closed on Sundays, but will be opened on Dec. 26 especially for this event, Anatolia reported.

    The gigantic bazaar, which has 65 streets and 22 gates, attracts around 300,000 visitors daily to its 3,300 stores.