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  1. The architecture is a synthetic representation of some of the most significant trends of Modern Movement in architecture, as it developed in Europe. The White City is also an outstanding example of the implementation of these trends taking into account local cultural traditions and climatic conditions.

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      World Heritage partnerships for conservation. Ensuring that...

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      World Heritage partnerships for conservation. Ensuring that...

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      UNESCO/NHK Videos on Heritage. Tel Aviv was founded in 1909...

  2. In 2003, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization ( UNESCO) proclaimed Tel Aviv's White City a World Cultural Heritage site, as "an outstanding example of new town planning and architecture in the early 20th century." [1] .

  3. In 2003, the White City of Tel Aviv was inscribed on UNESCOs World Heritage List. A plan to preserve the low-rise Modern structures was approved in 2007 and more than 1,500 buildings have been preserved to date. The White City of Tel Aviv is the largest single urban ensemble of Modern architecture in the world and the first modern city in ...

  4. The White City of Tel Aviv is the world’s largest collection of International or Bauhaus style buildings. Since being designated one of the first ‘modern’ UNESCO World Heritage Sites in the world in 2003, restoration of these buildings constructed by German immigrants in the 1920’s and 1930’s has picked up and this quarter is now ...

  5. UNESCO/NHK Videos on Heritage. Tel Aviv was founded in 1909 and developed as a metropolitan city under the British Mandate in Palestine. The White City was constructed from the early 1930s until the 1950s, based on the urban plan by Sir Patrick Geddes, reflecting modern organic planning principles.

  6. Visit Tel Aviv. White City. In 2003, UNESCO, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, proclaimed the historic zone of Tel Aviv, also know as The White City, as a World Cultural Heritage site.

  7. World Heritage partnerships for conservation. Ensuring that World Heritage sites sustain their outstanding universal value is an increasingly challenging mission in today’s complex world, where sites are vulnerable to the effects of uncontrolled urban development, unsustainable tourism practices, neglect, natural calamities, pollution, political instability, and conflict.