
The Old City Window
"In Jerusalem, you do not own a view. The view owns you — it has been waiting three thousand years for you to look."
Inside The Old City Window
Browse each room — click any image to explore in detail.
Walk Through with Amir
An intimate walkthrough — the way Amir presents a property to those he trusts.
Walk Through The Old City Window
Explore every room at your own pace — a fully immersive 3D walkthrough.
- Uninterrupted panoramic view of the Old City walls
- Rooftop sukkah integrated into the architectural design
- Hand-laid Jerusalem stone and brushed bronze throughout
- Private elevator to penthouse level
- Kosher kitchen with dual preparation areas
- Climate-controlled art storage room
- 24-hour concierge and diplomatic-grade security
- Walking distance to the Western Wall and King David Hotel
A penthouse in the King David Quarter is, by definition, a study in restraint. The neighbourhood will not tolerate anything loud. And so The Old City Window whispers — but what it says is extraordinary.
From every principal room, a single uninterrupted panorama: the ancient walls, the Temple Mount at dusk, the Mount of Olives catching the last gold of the day. The interior was designed by a Jerusalem-born architect who insisted on only three materials — hand-laid stone, brushed bronze, and glass. Nothing else was permitted to compete with the view.
The rooftop sukkah — carved into the skyline itself — is the apartment's emotional centre. Open to the sky, framed by bronze louvers that filter the Jerusalem light into geometric patterns on the stone floor, it transforms a religious obligation into an architectural event. Families who have lived here describe the sukkah as the reason they stay.

"A client once told me that the first morning she woke up here, she wept. Not from beauty — from recognition. She said the Old City walls looked exactly as she had imagined them since childhood, reading about Jerusalem at her grandmother's Shabbat table in Brooklyn. That is what this apartment does. It completes a sentence that began generations ago."
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The full dossier for The Old City Window — including architectural plans, fiscal structures, and residency pathways — is shared upon private introduction.