
What to see and do on Tel Aviv’s iconic Dizengoff Street
Cafés, bars, bakeries, restaurants and fashion houses line Tel Aviv’s longest throughfare.

Cafés, bars, bakeries, restaurants and fashion houses line Tel Aviv’s longest throughfare.

No need to take out your wallet to enjoy these 18 suggestions for touring, trekking and tanning in Israel’s city by the sea.

Reflections of Dizengoff’s 1970s heydays go viral online and on the street, leading to rekindled friendships and a popular exhibit.

Named for politicians, poets, heroes and heroines, the streets of Tel Aviv tell a fascinating story.

Watch the magnificent sunset over the Mediterranean Sea and then get ready for some serious fun.

Urban gardening is all the rage in busy Israeli urban areas including Tel Aviv, Haifa, Beersheva and Jerusalem.

The city is lowering the elevated square to street level in the hopes of bringing back its glory days. Don’t worry, the Fire & Water fountain will return.

Running course passes through some of the city’s main landmarks including Habima Square and along Dizengoff Street.

With apologies to Duke Ellington, it don’t mean a thing if it ain’t got that Tel Aviv swing.

Top 10 photographs of Israeli heritage sites go on display in Tel Aviv.

ISRAEL21c invites you on a walk along one of Tel Aviv’s liveliest boulevards.

‘The menu was born out of the kitchen and the bakery, two which seldom meet,’ say the baker-chef pair who opened this bread concept café.

It’s Tel Aviv’s most famous boulevard, and over the years its fortunes have risen and fallen. Today it’s once again in the top spot as one of the city’s best streets to visit.