ISTANBUL
— For more than a century, the grand Italianate mansion that serves as
an anchor of this city’s European quarter was a beehive of American
diplomacy and espionage. Spies toiled within and met their agents at the
bar across the street, reporters dropped by for after-work drinks, and
any Turk could walk in off the street to see the latest art exhibition
or browse the library. There seemed to be a celebration every night.
“We
were partying all the time,” said Ayse Ozakinci, who was a librarian
for four decades in the imposing structure, the American Consulate in
Istanbul. “There was a festive mood for everyone.”
And
then, a dozen years ago, the party stopped and security walls enclosed
the mansion, as the threat of terrorism sent American diplomats to a
fortified hillside compound on the city’s outskirts, overlooking the
Bosporus.
That
put the American government in the real estate business, thanks to a
law that required the State Department to keep ownership of the historic
building as a space to foster relations between the United States and
the Middle East.
Now the party is back on, but not exactly in the way lawmakers had intended.
The
walls came down recently, offering breathing room to a crammed
neighborhood and unveiling the building’s rebirth as an opulent
clubhouse for Istanbul’s social elite. With a new luxury hotel beside
it, the mansion, under a 51-year, roughly $25 million lease with the
United States government, is the latest outpost of the private club
empire Soho House.
In
2004, Congress, through the efforts of the former Senator Ernest F.
Hollings and backed by onetime Istanbul diplomats who wanted the United
States to preserve the building’s history, created the Hollings Center for International Dialogue.
The idea was to use the mansion as a place to “reinforce communication
and understanding between the U.S. and the Muslim world,” according to
the center’s website.
But
the cost of renovations and upkeep eventually made it necessary to find
a commercial use for the structure, known as the Palazzo Corpi for the
rich shipbuilder who had it constructed in the 19th century as his home.
Soho House, with its Turkish partner Bilgili Holding, has invested
nearly $110 million in the project and is now the primary tenant, while
the Hollings Center will have an office in the building and run its
programs and workshops from there.
Walking
through the building recently for the first time in years, Ms.
Ozakinci, who is not a member of the new club, marveled at the
renovations, saying they had restored much of the original grandeur,
even as she lamented that the mansion was not open to the public.
She
described how the modest wife of one former ambassador had ordered that
ceiling murals depicting nude goddesses be painted over. The murals
have now been rescued from layers of oil and paint.
She said there had been a “secret floor” up top for the Central Intelligence Agency.
“We pretended not to know about that,” she said.
A
rooftop pool, flanked by yellow-and-white striped beds and with a
sweeping view of the Golden Horn waterway and the minarets of the old
city, is a fresh touch. Inside, a layered approach to interior design
creates a “Downton Abbey”-meets-“Mad Men” effect, mixing late
19th-century with midcentury modern furniture. There are vintage club
chairs and old chesterfield sofas, and many new pieces manufactured in Turkey and made to look antique by workers banging away with hammers and chains.
Nick
Jones, the founder and chief executive of Soho House, a growing network
of private clubs across Europe and North America, decided on an
Istanbul location after visiting the city several years ago. “I just
fell in love with it,” he said. “Wow. I was taken with the place. It
sort of reminded me of New York energy.”
Mr.
Jones committed to Istanbul before violent antigovernment protests
swept Turkey in 2013, and before the economy slowed, diminishing an
image of the country as a rising global power that took hold in the
earlier years of the Islamist government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who
was prime minister for more than a decade and is now president.
Mr.
Jones said he watched the unfolding political turmoil closely but was
not scared away. “In my experience, 20 to 25 years now, whatever
happens, people still want to eat and drink and have a bit of fun,” he
said.
A
committee decides whom to admit and whom to reject, and careful
attention is paid to artists, writers and filmmakers, or as Mr. Jones
put it, the “creative soul” of Istanbul. “The struggling scriptwriter is
still one of our favorite members,” he said.
But having money is important, too, and plenty of bankers and lawyers make their way through the door.
Amid
the opulence, the drinking and the networking among the elite, there is
also an inescapable sense of separateness: Those who gather here,
despite their pretensions, represent a stratum of society far from the
center of things in Turkey these days. Mr. Erdogan’s government has
pushed for more religion in public life, cracked down on alcohol and
made Islamic schooling more widely available.
The
mansion sits as a testament to a bygone — some would say more innocent —
era of American diplomacy, when Foreign Service officers and spies, in
Istanbul but also around the world, could interact freely and casually
with locals, without the barriers of high walls and intricate security
procedures.
“Here
in the middle of the city, everyone came in,” said Ms. Ozakinci, who
added that “relations flourished” between Americans and Turks. When the
consulate moved to the fortified compound in 2003, she said, “suddenly
we were far from everything and no one wanted to come.”
Graham
Fuller, who as a young C.I.A. officer was stationed in Istanbul in the
1960s, recalled the time in an email as “truly a bygone era when
American diplomats were still welcomed and part of the inner city life
with only a lazy guard or two keeping watch over the consulate. The
magic of the neighborhood still lingers in those back streets, but the
American presence no longer does.”
Things
began to change after the Persian Gulf war, Ms. Ozakinci said. Sandbags
were piled near the windows, and eventually the street in front was
closed to traffic and visitors had to be cleared days in advance.
The
building was bought by the United States in 1907 — the first real
estate it owned in Europe and the second worldwide, after a facility in
Tangier, Morocco, a gift from the ruler of the country. The mansion was
the American Embassy in the late years of the Ottoman Empire and became
the consulate after Ankara was named the capital of the Turkish
republic.
If
the walls could speak, they might tell of the ghost of a Genoese
shipping magnate’s mistress, once said to haunt the halls and ornate
rooms, or of the time the building changed hands in a poker game.
The
latter tale goes like this: The rich American ambassador posted in the
early 1900s to what was then called Constantinople bought the building
with money out of his own pocket, for 28,000 Ottoman liras, or the
equivalent of $123,200 at the time, on the assumption that he would be
reimbursed by Congress. Washington lawmakers refused. Then, as recounted
in a memoir by an American teacher who lived here then and as passed
down through generations of diplomats, the ambassador organized a party
for senators and congressmen.
“There
were rich meats, there were unlimited quantities of first class drinks,
and finally there was poker which lasted deep in to the night,” the
teacher wrote.
At
some point, having lost “conspicuous sums,” the ambassador proposed the
embassy as a bet. If he lost, he would pay for it. But he won, and
Congress, it is said, appropriated the funds and acquired the mansion.
The story may be apocryphal, but it has persisted, lending the mansion’s majestic history an extra glint of intrigue.
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