Burj Al Babas
Burj Al Babas is an abandoned residential development located near Mudurnu, Turkey[1] with 732 nearly identical houses, each designed to resemble a miniature château.[2] The site, under development by the Sarot Group, was abandoned in 2019 after the developers filed for bankruptcy with a debt of US$5 million.[1]
Original concept
[edit]Burj Al Babas is a housing development project owned by Istanbul construction entrepreneurs The Yerdelen brothers.[2] The project involved the construction of 732 three-story luxury villas, all very similar to each other and characterised by elements of Gothic, English and American architecture. The cylindrical towers with dormer windows and the square towers with balustrades were respectively inspired by the Galata Tower and Maiden's Tower in Istanbul.[3] The name means "tower of Babas" in Arabic, referring to the nearby Babas Kaplıcası (Babas thermal spring), a bath house from the Ottoman era.
According to the original brochure, the centre of the complex was to include a domed structure containing a shopping centre, health and beauty facilities such as Turkish baths, a mosque, a movie theatre, and other facilities.[4]
The houses were on sale for between $370,000 and $530,000.[1]
Aiming for the Arab market, the partners named the development the Burj Al Babas Thermal Tourism Company and began marketing the houses through their real estate agency in Kuwait.[2]
The site in the Black Sea region of Turkey was situated near the region's hot springs. Excavations on the site revealed that 200 meters underground the water temperature reached 68°C (154°F).[2]
Complications
[edit]Construction began on the complex in 2014.[5] Using 2,500 workers, the developers aimed to finish the project in four years.[2] Sales were originally successful, with approximately half of the castles selling in advance. The buyers were primarily from the Gulf states, with approximately 150 from Kuwait City.[6]
A contractor, Çapan Demircan filed a complaint in 2014 that the construction company had breached environmental laws during the project, regarding their disposal of rubble. In February 2015 workers began to protest that they had not been paid. This culminated in one of the workers scaling one of the towers and threatening to jump; he was ultimately taken down by firefighters. Demircan pulled out of the project shortly afterwards, alleging that he was owed $700,000. He pursued the case for several years and was in violent altercations with Sarot Group individuals on two occasions, but has since abandoned the environmental lawsuit.[6]
By late 2016 construction work on the castles was behind schedule. This was initially attributed to the cold winter weather, then to a failed military coup that July. Contractors were not attending the site, with suspected complaints about payments.[6]
In 2018 sales stalled, causing the developer to enter bankruptcy.[1] Falling oil prices and instability in Turkey were cited as reasons for the slump in sales. The mayor of Mudurnu, Mehmet İnegöl, remained confident that the project would begin again.[2] A 2022 bankruptcy court ruling declared that the Sarot group was "comfortably in credit".[6]
As of 2022, no castles are finished, with 587 of them half-built.[7] Many of them have water damage, likely accrued from snowfall through the winters.[6]
In the summer of 2024, the Emir of Kuwait, Mishal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah visited Turkey and spoke with President Erdoğan; although details of the conversation have not been revealed, it is thought that the unfinished development was discussed. This was followed by a renewal of interest in the case. The fourteen companies run by the Yerdelen and the Sarot Group were entrusted to a Turkish state fund intended to rectify the financial situation of troubled businesses.[6]
In popular culture
[edit]Burj Al Babas is the setting for the music video of "Lose Control", a 2019 song by Meduza, Becky Hill and Goodboys.[8][9][10]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Koc, Cagan (26 November 2018). "Builder of $200 Million Turkish Chateaux Project Goes Bankrupt". Bloomberg. Retrieved 10 March 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f Gall, Carlotta (3 March 2019). "Want a Castle in Turkey? You May Find a Bargain". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 March 2019.
- ^ "La città dei castelli fantasma in Turchia". Il Post (in Italian). 2021-07-01. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
- ^ Burj Al Babas Catalogue
- ^ Ravenscroft, Tom (18 January 2019). "Drone footage reveals hundreds of abandoned Turkish chateaux". Dezeen. Retrieved 11 March 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f Michaelson, Ruth; Eski, Beril (26 October 2024). "'If I had the power I'd destroy the whole thing': what went wrong with the ghost town of Disney-style castles?". The Guardian. Detailed article about the situation in late 2024.
- ^ Cherner, Jessica (20 October 2022). "Haunting photos reveal a massive abandoned town of Disney-esque castles". CN Traveller.
- ^ Totaro, Romina (February 28, 2020). "The new life of Burj al Babas". Domus. Retrieved December 25, 2020.
- ^ KRONOS (October 29, 2019). "Mudurnu'nun şatoları klip seti oldu". Kronos News. Archived from the original on May 8, 2021. Retrieved December 25, 2020.
- ^ Smoak, Audrey (December 21, 2019). "Lose Control". The Era Of EDM. Retrieved December 25, 2020.