An
astonishing new extravagance hotel opened in Antakya, Turkey in 2020. Amazingly
it is at once an engineering wonder, an architectural attractiveness, and a
world-class archaeological site. In 2009
a construction crew was digging the foundation for a new hotel and surprise to
see an amazing discovery at Antakya Turkey. The digging crew unearthed a
gigantic mosaic of Roman times, along with over 35,000 artifacts ranging 2,300
years from at least 13 diverse civilizations.
This the amazing discovery put the hotel construction on hold however; they have
completed six months' excavation work. Hence, the dreams of building a hotel
dashed, potentially derailing the entire project. But a group “Asfuroğlu”
decided against that, and embrace the daunting challenge, they work hard with
archeological find into the hotel’s blueprint.
So,
they started to work with the Antakya Municipality, Hatay Archaeology Museum
& Adana Conservation Council for Cultural and Natural Assets on Turkey's leading
systemic archeological excavation since the 1930s. So, negotiation took place
11 years to conclude a final result of building the hotel come into being.
Finally, the 200-room Museum Hotel Antakya opened its doors for customers.
The
Hotel Antakya was designed by Turkish architect Emre Arolat. The five floors
are balanced on near 20,000 tons of structural steel four times more than the
Eiffel Tower columns on top of the actual archeological site. Where the eleven
thousand square feet Roman mosaic lay in-situ.
The
hotel’s Antakya lowest floor houses an open-air museum with glass floors and
walkways providing a superb and clear view of the mosaic and the various excavation
pits. The visitor rooms are massed above this open space, hovering over the
site in a stacked honeycomb structure, with glass windows, straight overlook the
archaeological findings.
The Ancient City of Antioch
The whole story started in 2009 when the famous city of Antakya stands on the site
of the ancient city Antioch, founded in the 4th century BC. At those times,
this region was the center of the Seleucid kingdom until the 1st century BC,
when it was annexed by Rome and was made the capital of the Roman province of
Syria.
Antioch
was once the third-largest city of the Roman Empire in size and significance,
after Rome and Alexandria, and possessed superb temples, theatres, aqueducts,
and baths. Antioch was also one of the earliest centers of much ecclesiastical significance
in the Byzantine Empire. However, the city changed hands more than a few times,
conquered by Byzantine, Seljuk, Crusaders, Ayyubid, Mamluk, finally the
Ottoman in the 16th century.
Therefore,
the archaeologists trust the mosaic may once have been part of a government building
or a villa dating back to the 5th century. Thus, the other artifacts found
inside date back to the Hellenistic Age, which started in 323 BC. Moreover to
the mosaic, which the biggest single-floor mosaic ever found, archaeologists exposed
ruins of a Roman bath, the first unbroken marble statue of the Greek Eros, and
several more artifacts.
The
project is completed after a hefty amount of $120 million and took 10 years to
complete, just from the perspective of the hotel but also for the impressive
archaeological findings. The Asfuroğlu family anticipating, that what they
would have found or how it would have changed the destiny of the region forever.
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