New palace ready in Istanbul after controversial Ak Saray
As the cost of Turkeyâs new presidential palace, unofficially known as the âAk Sarayâ continues to stir controversy due to its astronomical cost in tandem with its gargantuan size, restoration work on an old palace that is reportedly set to become the presidentâs office in Istanbul has ended.
The historic Vahdettin mansion, home to the last Ottoman Sultan Vahideddin (also known as Mehmed VI), has been renovated after four months of rapid work.
President Recep Tayyip ErdoÄan has reportedly selected the mansion as his possible new office in Istanbul, but there has been no official confirmation yet for the future use of the building.
The mansion, located in the quiet Asian Istanbul neighborhood of Ãengelköy and facing the Bosphorus, is not for from ErdoÄanâs personal home in the city.
ErdoÄan visited the mansion and checked on the restoration works in July, lending weight to suggestions that the compound could become his Istanbul office.
The restoration work also created controversy over the possible destruction of nearby buildings.
A large parking lot and a helicopter landing area were built for the compound, which is being guarded around the clock by tight police surveillance.
The government is still under fire due to the cost of the presidential palace in Ankara, which currently stands at 1.37 billion liras ($615 million), according to Finance Minister Mehmet ÅimÅek. The huge complex, worthy of entering ErdoÄanâs trademark âcrazy projectsâ such as the third Istanbul bridge or the Istanbul Canal, was also mocked in a number of foreign media outlets appalled by its incommensurable dimensions.
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