The Best of Beirut
The Best of Beirut
Discovering Beirut, you will find yourself in one of the most hedonistic city of the Mediterranean coast: trendy bars and clubs with outstanding line-ups.
Perfect place to watch and be part of the Mar Mikhael scene. Hip and bobochic atmosphere for this bar with an authentic vintage feel. Great start for bar hopping and chat listening to good deep house.
Adress: Tiyaan Building, Armenia street. Mar Mikhael. Tel:+961 1 565 463
When you are in Beirut, you need to be on top of it. Trendy bar and warm atmosphere for this great hangout to visit with friends and share drinks or dinner. The successful rooftop concept has even been exported to Dubai and Abu Dhabi.
Adress: Al Nahar Building 8th floor- Beirut Downtown- Tel:+961 3 090 936
Book it in advance. Now. Through their saturday show "Hishik Bishik", Metro al Madina reinvented the Arab cabaret. Ya Mustafa, Ya Mustafa, Chic Chac Choc, more than 10 artists, musicians, singers, actors and bellydancers take you back to the golden age of the Egyptian cabarets. Get ready to channel the "baladi" in you.
Adress: Sarolla building (level -2) near the Kababji restaurant. Hamra street. Tel: +961 1 753 021
The summer electro music connoisseurs destination in Beirut. You can't miss its giant structure located in El Biel. The talented team behind the project has upgraded the level in the Middle East, starting with their first club UberHaus in Hamra (now closed). Dixon, Solomun, Black Coffee, just name them, they all came to GARTEN. The crowd is young, they are there to dance and enjoy. No Chichi.
Adress: Biel, new Beirut exhibition center Downtown Beirut. Tel: +961 76 363 662
ONLY OPEN IN SUMMER
Architectural ovni. The legendary club designed by the famous Bernard Khoury is labeled as a perfect example of ‘war architecture’. Party in this underground war shelter and get touched by the sunrise light when the roof opens. Since its opening in 1998, new and trendier places may have popped up but till now going to BO 18 is an experience. That’s not mere clubbing, that’s living Beirut’s energy through its contradictions: lively, macabre, hedonistic and immediate. Preferably go on weekends as an after-party (80’s nights are organized on Thursdays but it's not the best to feel the real energy of the place).
Adress: Karantina Beirut- Tel: +961 3 810 618
The Best of Beirut
The Best of Beirut
Hummus. What else?
Food in Beirut has more to offer. Experiment Lebanese comfort food or enjoy lavish restaurants.
Local specialities
• Kibbe nayeh: raw meat mixed with bulghur
• Grilled Halloumi: Halloumi is a cheese originally from Cyprus. Mix it with fig jam or honey.
• Mudardara: a vegetarian dish made of lentils and rice topped with caramelized onions. Different from Mujadara, made of mashed lentils.
• Shanklish: very specific kind of dried cheese often mixed with thyme (zaatar)
• Kishk: fermented yoghurt mixed with bulghur, ask for it on your manaish (small gallette with cheese, zaatar or meat)
• Cafe blanc (White coffee/Ahwe bayda): Soothing drink made of hot water with orange blossom water.
Source: Liza Restaurant
Liza Beirut nestled in a traditional designed Lebanese house in Ashrafiye, offers a fine though traditional lebanese and levantine food experience.
Adress: Metropolitan Club, Doumani Street, Trabaud, Ashrafieh, Beirut Tel: +961 1 208 108 / +961 71 71 71 05
Source: Em Sharif
RIP Diet. True institution, Em Sherif is a sophisticated restaurant where you will taste levantine cuisine at its best. There’s no menu, just sit and attend the show. In this small palace, waiters will take full control of your comfort. Book prior to any visit, specially on week-ends as it is a large family hang-out place.
Adress: Monot Street, Beirut Tel:+961 70 919 119
Source: Onno
2 different adresses for this Armenian food restaurant. Family business, the food is served with skill and passion.Traditional and modest in Burj Hammoud and hipper in Badaro. Try their "Manti" or their sweet cherry beef meat "Ras Asfour bel karaz".
Adress: in Burj Hammoud: Aghabios Street (Facing the Life center Church)Tel: +961 3 801 476/ in Badaro: Badaro Street Tel:+961 70 383 203
Usually said that good food comes from a good heart. Tawlet is one of these passion projects making you feel at home. The team behind «Souk al Tayeb» (the delicious market), an organic market bringing fresh village products, has launched Tawlet in 2009. Everyday a cook from a different region prepares local dishes sharing with you their passion for better food.
Adress: 12 rue Naher, Armenia Street Tel:+961 1 448 129
Source: R.Habayeb
On your way back to your hotel, in the middle of the night stop by Barbar to grab a sandwich, drink rainbow-colored juices or finish the chat you have started at the club.
Adress: Omar Ben Abdelaziz street. Hamra Tel:+961 1 753 330
The Best of Beirut
The Best of Beirut
Beirut is not an easy chick. Find here the main areas and places to visit the feel the soul of the city:
Raouche-The Corniche
Hamra Street
Solidere-Downtown
Gemmayzeh
Dahiyeh
Reaching Beirut by plane, your attention will be caught by the Raouche (the Rock, from the french Rocher) bording the azure blue mediterranean sea. Joggers, couples or families often take a stroll on the corniche. Facing the Pigeon Rock, you will find several restaurants and narguileh cafes lining the coast cliffs.
If you are visiting during the summer, continue a few hundred meters from Raouche and stop by 'Beirut Sporting club" or just "Le Sporting" like Beirutis call it. That can be a nice introduction to Beirut sociology: hedonistic crowds in a 1960's still-stylish beach club. Every Friday night during the summer, the Sporting Club hosts the ultimate summer rendez-vous: Decks on the Beach.
Source: L.Chahine
Hamra street used to be the center of cultural activities of Beirut in the 1960’s and 1970’s. Very cosmopolitan as it was home of several communities from Lebanon and the entire Middle East (Maronites, Greeks Orthodox, Palestinians, Iraqis and Syrians), Hamra has a bit lost of its superb. Sip a turkish coffee and have shisha at Cafe Hamra. Over the past few years, the district seems to be back on track with the opening of new bars and restaurants: if you are around, check if there is any night show at Metro al Madina, a modern version of the old oriental cabaret.
Hamra is lively and young, as it's located close to the AUB (American University of Beirut). «Al Jam3a al amrikye» founded in 1866, is considered as the most elite university in Lebanon and in the Middle East. You can visit its charming and full of green campus, overseeing the Mediterranean.
This area is the historical downtown. Organized around the Place de l’Etoile, the neighborhood was renovated to erase any remaining aftermaths of the civil war. The output of the controversial renovation is a very modern, a bit-fake vintage look taking us back to the «Paris of the Middle East».
Take a walk to see different key historical and religious sites: Roman columns, St Georges cathedral and Al Amin Mosque. Just nearby you can walk to the luxury district of Foch-Allenby and to Beirut Souks, an open-air mall located en place of the old souks.
Walking a bit in direction of the Serail (Palace of the Government), take the Wadi Abu Jamil street (formely Wadi al Yahood street, former Jewish district of Beirut) in which you will see the Maghen Abraham Synagogue. Renovated in 2010 by the Lebanese authorities, it is not open to visitors, nor for cult (Lebanese jewish population is estimated at less than 100 individuals).
Charming street, the Gemmayzeh area has a pittoresque feel and is a pretty relaxing escape to the hustle of Beirut. Walk all over the street until Mar Mikhail where you will see the famous Electricite du Liban building (Beirutis will also share the special relation they all have with electricity). The area is very different depending on when you're visiting it: the seducing desuet day-look with nun’s schools and old people at their balconies, changes into a vibrant nightlife spot with fancy restaurants and trendy bars.
Have breakfast or lunch in the area and through the Mar Nicolas stairs to get to the newly renovated Sursock Museum. Outstanding architecture and rich Lebanese and international artists collections. Don’t miss the "Salon Arabe" and the vitral windows of the 1st floor.
If you continue straight on Mar Mikhail, you will find yourself in Armenia Street. Pay attention to the shop tenants names, the "ian" at the end of every family names indicates you that the district was, with Burj Hammoud, home of the Armenian refugees fleeing Ottoman genocide in 1915.
Translated as suburbs, this area is not a top-of-mind destination for many visitors. Far from being an homogeneous neighborhood, it's an interesting place to see a different Beirut. Watching around the hustle and bustle of chaotic traffic and the street vendors show can really be entertaining. With Shiaa representing 80% of the population, Ayatollah Khomeyni portraits and tchadors can give you a Teheran feel. Haret Hraik, center of Dahieh, is often referred as the Hezbollah headquarters. Not very far, you can visit the "Hippodrome de Beyrouth", urban garden surrounded by concrete (this doesn't have to be misunderstood with the Roman Hippodrome of Beirut, in the northern part of the city).
The Best of Beirut
The Best of Beirut
Lost in translation?
Arabic speaker or not, all equals here! Get the best of the lingo to interact or understand a bit more of Mashrou Leila's lyrics (that's not guaranteed though).
• Hi!: Hi! (we are serious, the complete version being Hi, Kifak ca va?)
• How are you?: Kifak (m)? Kifik (f)?
• Good: Mni7 (m) Mni7a (f). The "7" is the guttural sound «h» of «Habibi»
• I can/ I can't: Fiyeh/Ma fiyeh
• I am hungry: Jo3et. The "3" is the sound of "3arabi" or"3ayni" (my eyes)
• Cute: Mahdoom (m) Mahdoomeh (f)
• Really!: 3an jad!
• Shu?: This word can basically be used in everything situation, with every other word examples: Shu ca va? = How are you? /Shu hayl class! How classy are you!
• Maybe: Barkeh
• Bullshit: Tafnis
• Morning: Bokra
• Tomorrow: Bokra, tomorrow morning= bokra 3a bokra
• Nearby: Fashkha
• Cool: Salbeh
• Amazing: Bi3a2id. The "2" is a silent qaf as prounounced in some Middle east dialects. Qalbi (my heart) is pronounced 2albi
• Stuck (for electrical devices): Mtalet. My laptop is stuck: Laptop tab3i mtalet
• Lighter: Ida7a
• Here it is: Ya7oweh
• Mosquito: Barghash
• Straw: Challumeau
• Mobile phone: Cellulaire
The Best of Beirut
The Best of Beirut
Noisy but trendy.
Crowded but selective. Chaotic but hypnotic.
Confused city, a while schizophrenic, Beirut is not your classic Arab city.
Discover with us emblematic and modern sounds from Beirut remixed by the talented Bach from Toukadime Records. -Mike Massy: N7eb nghani -Yasmine Hamdan: Beirut -Fairuz: Li Beirut -Mashrou3 Leila: Fasateen -Mashrou3 Leila: Icarus -Sabah: Allo Beirut -Wadih Essafi: La Inta Radhi -Paris-Beirut-Damas: Albi -Yasmine Hamdan: Nediya
• Beyrouth en Francais, بيروت in arabic was founded 5,000 years ago.
• Beirutis: around 400,000 but the total agglomeration has around 2 millions inhabitants.
• Languages: mainly Arabic, English and French, 3 of them mixed in the "Lebnene", lebanese dialect. Several communities are talking Armenian, Portuguese, Tagalog and Tamul.
• National currency: the Lebanese pound (Lira) and the US Dollars are both widely used: 1US$= 1,500 LP.
Starting our ConfusedArab medina guides with Beirut was pretty obvious.
Noisy but trendy. Crowded but selective. Chaotic but hypnotic. Confused city, a while schizophrenic, Beirut is not your classic Arab city.
For most of the followers of the 19 officially recognized confessions in Lebanon, calling Beirut an Arab city is even a blasphemy. You might sometimes hear on the terraces of the cafes of Ashrafiye, or in Zaytuna Bay, people saying «I am not Arab, I am Phoenician».
Phoenicians, a sailor and trader people who once dominated the Mediterranean sea, were based in modern Levant. Despite a strong culture, Phoenicians are said to have invented modern alphabet, their language and civilization completely vanished. Claiming being Phoenician today is a way of showing a strong singularity to the other cities of the region. The city has been and still is today the shelter for several communities (Armenians in the 1910’s, Palestinians and more recently Syrians) seeking asylum far away from a violent home.
Discovering Beirut, you will find yourself in one of the most hedonistic city of the Mediterranean coast: beautiful and well-read people, trendy bars and clubs, amazing restaurants with succulent food, Beirut has it all.
«Switzerland of the Middle East» in the seventies, Lebanon and more specifically Beirut went through a harsh and complicated civil war splitting the city in two: West (Muslim area) and East (Christian area). However, Beirut is not an easy chick and you will need more than a visit to understand its sociology and geography. Whether they pray in a church, in a mosque or they don’t pray at all, Beirutis share this unique pride of belonging to Beirut.
Boiling creative scene, talented artists and designers have chosen to call Beirut home.
• Fairuz
Even though she was not born in Beirut, Fairuz is literally the «Mother of all Lebanese». Born in 1934, she is one of the most acclaimed and respected Arab divas (with Oum Kalthoum and Warda al Jazayria). Her natural charisma and her very specific jazzy style make her a living iconic figure. Every morning, in every restaurant, home or in every taxi you will hear Fairuz melodies.
• Nizar Qabbani
Syrian born, Nizar Qabbani (1923-1998) chose Beirut as a life partner, calling the city «The Mistress of the world». Considered with Mahmoud Darwish as one of the most talented modern Arab poet, his work mixes love, women and Arab nationalism.
• Sabah
«El Shahroura» was the symbol of the Beiruti dolce vita. Recently mourned, Sabah (1927-2014) was a Lebanese singer and actress who played of all the codes. Married 9 times, and had maybe the same number of plastic surgeries, she fully embodies the Beirut «live and let live» motto.