Neighborhoods of Beersheba


The neighborhoods of Beersheba refer to urban and residential districts in the city of Beersheba, Israel.

Old City

The Old City is the historical center of Beersheba. Based on the core of the old Ottoman town, it was expanded by the British during the Mandate era. Street signs in English from the Mandate era are still visible on many street corners. Laid out in a grid pattern, it consists mostly of one- and two-floor stone buildings, although some taller buildings were recently built. The old Turkish buildings dating back about 100 years are mostly in a state of neglect although some exceptions can be found where private individuals or organizations have renovated them. Until the late 1990s, the Old City was the commercial hub of Beersheba. But since the opening of the large Kenyon HaNegev mall near the Central Bus Station many of the leading chain stores have moved out. There are some sites of historical interest in the Old City: Abraham's Well, the Negev Museum of Art, Allenby Garden, the Turkish Railway Station, the British War Cemetery and the Aljama Mosque.

Alef

Alef is located to the immediate north of the Old City. It was the first neighborhood built after Israeli independence and provided housing for immigrants from Morocco, Iraq, Yemen and India. Shechuna Alef consists of rows of semi-detached houses and a few apartment blocks.

Bet

Bet is located northwest of Alef. It was also built in the 1950s, and provided housing for immigrants from Poland, Egypt, and later Libya Georgia and Russia. Shechuna Bet is home to the Vasermil Stadium, home of Hapoel Be'er Sheva, the city's major football club.

Gimmel

Gimmel is northeast of the Old City. Soroka Medical Center and Ben-Gurion University of the Negev are located here. Many students live in the neighborhood and the university dormitories are situated here. It consists largely of apartment blocks.

Dalet

Dalet is located north of Bet and west of Gimmel, south west to Ramot and northeast to Nahal Ashan. The neighborhood holds the Kaye Academic College of Education, a few dozen community centers, the Nurit immigrant integration camp, a psychiatric hospital, two major shopping centers. The neighborhood holds the famous pyramid house.

Dalet Mizrah

The newest part of Dalet neighborhood where Ben Gurion University is located.

Hei

Hei is located northwest of the Old City, and west of Alef and Bet. It houses the Ye'elim Absorption Center.

Vav

Vav is located in the northwest of the city, north of Bet and west of Daled. It consists of a combination of apartment blocks and private homes, and has its own shopping mall. The old Vav neighborhood, also known as Ringelblum, is popular with students due to its proximity to the university.

Tet

Tet is located to the west of the Old City. It consists almost entirely of tower blocks.

Yud Alef

Yud Alef is located to the west of Tet. Most of the homes are detached or semi-detached. The neighborhood includes the Australian Soldier Park.

Nahal Ashan

Nahal Ashan, also known as Neve Menachem is the westernmost neighborhood in Beersheba. It was built in the past decade and consists largely of private homes. The Neighberhood is built south west of the Ashan River and Ashan Riven is named after the biblican Ashan city in the Judea region

Nahal Beka

is the city's southernmost neighborhood, located to the southwest of Neve Noy. It was built in the 1990s to house new immigrants from the former Soviet Union. The caravans and prefabricated homes are now being replaced.

Naot Lon

Naot Lon is located in the west of the city, west of Tet. It is built around woodland and consists largely of detached and semi-detached houses. The neighborhood includes the Air Force technical high school and the Country Club.

Neve Noy

Neve Noy is located directly south of the Old City. It was founded in 1952 as an agricultural settlement consisting of small stone cottages with vegetable gardens, known as Mishkay Ezer. The first residents were immigrants from Morocco and Tunisia who had been living in ma'abarot. It was renamed Neve Noy in 1979, and consists largely of detached two-storey homes. Streets in this neighborhood are named after plants that grow in the Negev, such as Atad, Shita and Tzabar. Neve Noy is home to the second largest Karaite community in Israel, as well as Maccabi Be'er Sheva, Beersheba's second football team.

Neve Ze'ev

Neve Ze'ev (נווה זאב is located in the southwest of the city, south of Tet. It consists almost entirely of large tower blocks in an area carved out of the surrounding hillside. Many construction projects are under way.

Ramot

Ramot is the northernmost and easternmost neighborhood in the city, located northern of Gimmel, and named for the fact that it is built on hills. It consists of a mixture of tower blocks and houses, and is still being expanded.