FF91C70D-29C5-45C6-92C5-5B6BD5E1DBB4 Relatively Offbeat: Travel Tuesday: Beirut, Lebanon

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Travel Tuesday: Beirut, Lebanon

This week's Travel Tuesday feature is brought to you by a guest blogger from Beirut, Lebanon.

Sub the well-trampled Eiffel Tower for the Ottoman Clock Tower at the Grand Sérail. Instead of walking through the Arc de Triomphe, swim through the arched Pigeons' Rocks at Raouché. Rather than the glass pyramid at the Louvre, see the Egyptian Revival building at the National Museum of Beirut, the Paris of the East. After all, that's what it means to be "relatively offbeat."
Beirut, Lebanon's capital and largest city, has something for everyone. If you want to rub elbows with a real-life Middle Eastern prince, there's a night club or two for you, and other popular soirees are located right on the warm, sandy beaches. For the history buffs, Beirut is packed with archaeological treasures reaching back the dawn of history. After dancing all night, swimming all morning, and museum-hopping all afternoon, refuel on top cuisine at one of Beirut's world-renowned restaurants, with menus ranging from traditional Lebanese to Asian fusion.

Nightlife

Beirut's ultimate night club must be SkyBar. This rooftop venue was voted "coolest night club in the world" by The New York Times, and it consistently appears on DJmag's Top 100 Clubs list. It is positioned between the white-capped mountains on one side and the white-capped waves on the other, and it literally hovers above the earth while humbly meeting the sky. This point of intersection is what inspired Lebanese architect Sari el-Khazen to design SkyBar with the four elements - fire, water, earth, wind - in mind. The result has been famously called something that "must be lived and felt," and the most chic national and international VIPs unanimously agree. Other notable rooftop night clubs include Cherry on the Rooftop and Bar ThreeSixty (both in the Le Gray Hotel) and White, located on Sea Side Road.
There are dozens of unique clubs in Beirut, each with its own tempo and flair, but two of the most noteworthy are Buddha Bar and B018. Buddha Bar, like its Parisian sister, is themed with plush elements of the Far East, like a 30-foot tall statue of the Buddha at the end of a grand staircase laced with golden chandeliers. It is housed in an old theater on Riad Solh Square, but instead of seeing films, you might meet film stars, or even royalty. A truly Lebanese club, B018 is as famous with celebrities as it is locally for its liberal atmosphere and "wartime architecture," which has placed it multiple times among Wallpaper's ranks of "best bars in the world." The former Palestinian refugee camp turned Civil War underground music venue, B018 has a hypogeal feel with casket-shaped benches, but any morbid association is quickly lost when the roof of the underground chamber opens up to reveal the glittering stars of night shining down on the dance floor.
Beaches
Located on the sapphire shores of the Mediterranean, Beirut boasts inviting beaches aplenty, dotted with hopping night clubs in the guise of cabanas. While much of the coastline is privately owned by various resorts (Riviera, Praia, e.g.), some host quieter beaches (Iris, Lazy B, e.g.), where you can relax without feeling the bass thumping in your sternum. Resort beaches are available for non-residents with a day-pass at a modest fee. If you prefer to avoid doling out dough, don't miss a stroll along the Corniche, Beirut's boardwalk, where local men pole fish and smoke shisha, while further along, families gather for a swim, a picnic, or a dive from the rocks into the warm, crystalline water. When you need some refreshment after a day of sun, sand, and sea, there are plenty of restaurants to choose from, or take advantage of the mobile coffee and food vendors - while holding on to your coveted spot on the beach.

Archaeology

Those inspired by Indiana Jones - or real archaeologists like Kathleen Kenyon and Howard Carter - will not want for ancient treasures in Beirut. The city itself is a 5,000-year old harbor, and prehistoric finds highlight the profound complexities of Paleolithic humankind. Roman baths are being restored right in the city's Downtown Central District, and the American University of Beirut campus is also home to the National Museum of Beirut, which houses a vast array of invaluable artifacts: prehistoric, Canaanite, Phoenician, Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Byzantine, Arab, and Ottoman.
Although the museum is already brimming with fascinating finds, more is surely to come. As Beirut experiences a building boom, a team of very devoted local archaeologists is doing everything it can to record structures and resurface artifacts before new condos and office buildings are planted on top of them. Their efforts are bound to bring even more of Beirut's most distant and more recent past into the limelight it deserves.

 

Restaurants

The culture of food is gaining attention from anthropologists and tourists alike. Beirut is one of those destinations that offers visitors insight into traditional recipes for houmous, baba ghanoush, and kebab, as well as tastes of the foreign and modern, like sculpted seafood, or for dessert, a feuillantine aux framboises that you might swear was created in a Parisian patisserie.
Lebanese cuisine outside of Lebanon is rarely as delicious and economical as it is in its homeland, even in the bustling and chic Downtown Beirut. Do not miss the opportunity to gorge yourself on mezze, and reviewers agree that Karam is a great place to start. This world-famous restaurant is located near Nejmeh Square (Place de l'Etoile), and it offers authentic Lebanese cuisine, friendly service, and a lovely setting, all for a very reasonable price.
If you're so lucky to stay in Lebanon long enough to start missing your native cuisine, try Le Relais de l’Entrecôte for steak with a world-famous secret sauce and exquisite desserts, or Bob's Easy Diner for a 50s jukebox feel and a philly, cheese burger, or barbeque. Would you like French fries with that? Yes, with houmous, please.

Image Credits:
nytimes.com
downtownbeirut.com


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