Istanbul Central Business District
Hospital
area
Cevahir
Metrocity
Zorlu Center
Yıldız metro
(⛴️ T1 🔧M7)
(⛴️ Fu T1 🔧M7)
Tower
⛴️, Marmaray
Istanbul's Central Business District as the real estate industry refers to it, is not the historic city center, but a 7-km-long north–south corridor of modern areas mostly along Barbaros Boulevard and Büyükdere Avenue. As of late 2021, 33% of the Class A office space in the metropolitan area was located in the CBD, of which about 790,000 sqm in Maslak, 690,000 sqm in Levent, 500,000 sqm in Zincirlikuyu/Esentepe/Gayrettepe and 100,000 sqm in Etiler.[1]
The Istanbul Metro's Line 2 serves the CBD's main north-south corridor, with Line 6 and Line 7 providing east-west service. In addition, Line 7 is to be extended southward from Şişli—Mecidiyeköy station to Beşiktaş ferry station.
The historic city center is in Fatih and contains historic sites, the Grand Bazaar and adjacent wholesale/retail districts, but is not a modern "central business district" in that it does not have modern retail formats, dense residential and hotel towers, etc.
These can be found in the following edge cities with concentrations of office space, shopping malls, residential towers, entertainment and educational facilities, hospitals, etc.
From south to north, they are:[2]
Symbols | hospital metro line military base |
museum/monument office/ residential tower pier |
planned or under construction shopping mall/area |
stadium university |
N neighborhood D district |
Gallery
[edit]-
Trump Towers Istanbul, Mecidiyeköy
-
Gayreteppe streetscape
-
Etiler seen from Metrocity
-
New Boğaziçi University metro station
-
Above Şişli station
-
Cevahir mall
-
Bomonti skyline
-
Zorlu Center complex
-
Metrocity tower
-
Kanyon mall
-
View of Levent and beyond from Istanbul Sapphire mall
-
Maslak skyline (2007)
-
İstinye Park complex
-
Vadistanbul construction (2016)
References
[edit]- ^ "Istanbul Office Market General Overview" (PDF). Propin: 3, 9.
- ^ Istanbul Office Market Overview Q1 2014 (PDF). Property Investment Consultancy. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 December 2022. Retrieved 26 July 2019.