Bauhaus Hotels in “White City” Tel Aviv
The “Norman Hotel”
During the 1930s Tel Aviv tripled ןts size by Jewish German immigrants who brought with them the architectural style of the Bauhaus. The clean urban lines have been adapted to the Mediterranean climate, creating an urban landscape that includes impressive white buildings surrounded by the blue sea. In 2003, UNESCO declared the White City of Tel Aviv a World Heritage Site, recognizing one of the richest exhibits in the world of Bauhaus architecture. The Norman hotel is located next to many historic Bauhaus buildings in Tel Aviv “White City” district, including trendy cafes, kiosks, bars and restaurants, and the Israel National Theatre – “The Habima”.
A calm, luxurious getaway where everything just clicks. The Norman blends beautifully restored history with bold design, art-filled spaces, and food you’ll keep talking about long after checkout. Add a rooftop pool floating above the city, and you’ve got a boutique hotel that feels intimate yet delivers big-time elegent energy. It’s relaxed, refined, and effortlessly cool — the kind of place that makes you slow down, look around, and say: yeah, this is exactly right, I’ve arrived.
Pick your cuisine vibe at the Norman’s: “Alena” for elegant-but-chill dining, The “Library Bar” for timeless classics, or head up to the rooftop for world-famous Japanese tapas at “Dinings”. Three spots, zero wrong choices. Just really a very good food and great atmosphere.
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The “Poli House”
Originally built in 1934 as Polishuk House, the Poli House is a V-shaped Bauhaus gem with a pretty wild past. Once offices, once an underground printing spot, then years of neglect — until a smart restoration brought it back to life. Today, its preserved shell meets fresh 21st-century style, all within the rules of Tel Aviv’s White City. Now reborn as the Poli House Hotel, it’s a cool urban base for Bauhaus lovers, steps from the beach, Nachlat Binyamin, Carmel Market, Shenkin Street, Dizengoff Square and Rothschild Boulevard. Old soul, city heartbeat.
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The “Lili & Bloom” Hotel
Designed in the 1930s by architect Alexander Friedman, the Lily & Bloom Boutique Hotel is a true Bauhaus classic. Originally home to one of Tel Aviv’s first Mizrachi Bank branches, the building is now protected heritage. Its exterior and interiors keep the clean lines and spirit of the 1930s alive, with a cool boutique twist.
Perfectly placed near Rothschild Boulevard, right in the heart of Tel Aviv. The vibe is warm, relaxed, and welcoming — a calm little bubble just steps from the city buzz. From the rooms and lobby to the patios, rooftop solarium, and breakfast spread, every detail is thoughtfully designed to keep you comfortable, happy, and fully in Tel Aviv mode.
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The “Cinema” Hotel
Built in 1938–39 by architect Yehuda Magidovitch, the Esther Cinema was made to vibe perfectly with Dizengoff Square, then called Zina Plaza. Decades later, it got a smart makeover and turned into a standout boutique hotel. The wide spiral staircase steals the show, while the lobby keeps the cinema spirit alive with original projectors, theater seats, posters, and classic movie screenings. Head up to the fourth-floor terrace for an unbeatable view over newly renovated Dizengoff Square — Tel Aviv at its liveliest, coolest, and most energetic.
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