Avenue Mohammed V, Rabat Explained

Avenue Mohammed V, sometimes referred to by its old name Avenue Dar al-Makhzen, is a major thoroughfare in downtown Rabat, Morocco. Its main section was created under the French Protectorate in Morocco and mostly developed between 1915 and 1932, when it was also known as Cours Lyautey.[1] At the southern end of that section is the As-Sunna Mosque, whose history dates back to the 18th century like that of the nearby royal palace or Dar el-Makhzen.

Name

Before Moroccan independence in March 1956, what is now Avenue Mohammed V used to come under several names: from north to south, rue el Gza, rue Bab Jdid, rue Bab Teben, all three in the old medina; avenue Dar el-Makhzen, between Boulevard Galliéni (later renamed Avenue Hassan II), and rue de la Maréchale (west) / rue Maurice Pascouet (east; later renamed into, respectively, Avenue Soekarno in 1960 and Avenue Al Mansour Addahbi); Cours Lyautey, between Avenue Soekarno / Al Mansour Addahbi and Avenue Moulay Hassan with the As-Sunna Mosque (this section was also known as avenue Dar el-Makhzen); and Avenue des , running southeast beyond the mosque into the ministries' neighborhood and leading to the Protectorate Residence. All these tracks were renamed in honor of then-reigning King Mohammed V in July 1956.[2]

Urban design

Avenue Mohammed V is a prime example of urban design in the context of the French protectorate, in which first resident-general Hubert Lyautey promoted the creation of "new cities" (French: villes nouvelles) next to the older medinas that were preserved in their traditional urban form. In Rabat as in Casablanca, Fez, Marrakesh and Meknes, the design of Rabat's new city was led by Henri Prost, with assistance for landscaping by Jean-Claude Nicolas Forestier.

Notable buildings

The avenue's northern section is one of the thoroughfares that intersect Rabat's old medina, lined with shops and several mosques. The point where it crosses the Andalusian wall of Rabat is the location of the city's central market built in the early protectorate era, for which the ancient gate of Bab Tben was demolished. Further to the south, the avenue's wider central segment is lined with a number of iconic buildings hosting major Moroccan institutions. These include, roughly from north to south and from west to east:

Further southeast, the avenue is bordered by ministries and ends at the entrance of the former protectorate residence, now Ministry of Interior, designed by Albert Laprade and completed in 1924:

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dome at MIT Libraries . Avenue Mohammed V .
  2. Web site: Le Monde . Il n'y a plus de "cours Lyautey" à Rabat ! . .
  3. Web site: Le Matin . Le Palais de Justice des années 20 en péril . .
  4. Transformation de l'espace urbain par le Protectorat à travers le cas de la ville de Rabat . Abderrahmane Chorfi . 247–258 . Villes rattachées, villes reconfigurées, XVIe - XXe siècles . Denise Turrel . Presses universitaires François-Rabelais . Tours . 2013 .
  5. News: Le Temps . . La nouvelle Banque d'Etat .
  6. Web site: Discover Rabat: Parlement du Maroc (Ex-Palais de justice) . facebook . Tayeb Laabi . 2020 . Jeune Chambre Internationale Rabat .
  7. Web site: Au pays du soleil couchant . . Jean-François Robert, architecte D.P.L.G., au delà du cinéma Empire (II) : la collaboration avec la société Balima .
  8. Web site: L'Opinion . Rabat / ONCF : Le réaménagement de la gare Rabat-Ville entre les mains de l’UNESCO . Houda Belabd . .
  9. Web site: Au pays du soleil couchant . . Jean-François Robert, architecte D.P.L.G., au delà du cinéma Empire (I) : les sources .
  10. Web site: Maroc : le Musée MMVI, écrin chic pour Rabat . Jeune Afrique . . Youssef Aït Akdim . .