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Is Jerusalem cable car turning Old City into Disneyland?

Urbanists are claiming that the Jerusalem cable car project would destroy the ancient city’s skyline, while Karaite community members deplore desecration of their cemetery.
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Barring significant delays, in two years Jerusalem will roll out a new cable car able to transport 3,000 people an hour from the new city straight to the Old City’s Holy Basin, home to the world’s holiest Jewish, Christian and Muslim sites. The government approved the 200 million Israeli shekel ($55 million) project last May, on the annual celebration of Jerusalem Day marking unification of its eastern and western parts, and plans have been submitted to national planning authorities. The planned 1.4-kilometer (0.9-mile) route will begin at the complex that once housed Jerusalem’s first train station, floating at a speed of 21 kph (13 mph) over the biblical Hinnom Valley and stopping at Mount Zion. From there, it will glide to the controversial, planned Kedem compound adjacent to the Old City’s Dung Gate. The cable car will initially have three stops and eventually be extended to additional sites in East Jerusalem, such as the Pool of Siloam, Mount of Olives and Gethsemane. 

The plan has generated criticism from many quarters. Last September, Haaretz reported that prominent architects were warning the project would be a blight on the unique skyline of the walled Old City. A month later, the newspaper published a petition signed by dozens of writers, artists and archaeologists under the slogan “Jerusalem is not Disneyland.” The signatories wrote that the plan “would completely alter the skyline, the scenery and the character of the historic and holy space around the Old City. The cable car will be completely out of place in the Old City and seriously damage the Hinnom Valley.”

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