If you thought Ramot Polin would have been the dystopian highlight of my trip to Jerusalem, that’s just because I hadn’t mentioned the Clal Centre yet.
What is it that attracts us to unsettling environments, and in particular, architectural dereliction? Joann Greco, writing about The Psychology Ruin Porn, cites the implied romance, nostalgia, wistfulness, and the provocative nature of abandoned places, as well as themes of time, nature, mortality, and disinvestment. I’d concur that most of that holds true for the Clal Center’s eerie appeal. The only difference is: the Clal Centre isn’t actually abandoned.
Built in the 1970s, the Clal Centre, also known as Binyan Clal (בנין כלל), was Jerusalem’s first major indoor shopping mall, and for the next decade or so was occupied by a large number of privately owned shops and offices, including those associated with government agencies. By the 1990s though, many of the centre’s occupants had moved or gone out of business, largely due to the relocation of government offices to the nearby Givat Ram neighbourhood, and shoppers’ preference for the admittedly much brighter and less intimidating-looking Malha Mall.
The Clal Centre’s reputation for being a suicide hotspot (so much so that safety nets had to be installed around the building’s exteriors, due to the number of people leaping to their deaths from the upper levels) didn’t help either, nor did circulating rumours that a criminal gang had murdered one of their rivals and covertly buried the body in the building’s concrete foundations. Some believe the Clal Centre to actually be haunted.
Stepping inside, it’s not difficult to understand why.

The rationale for the Clal Centre’s unique brand of eeriness lies in its straddling the boundary between the benign and the ominous. It’s not abandoned, but neither could it be said that it’s really operational, at least not in the traditional sense. The Clal Centre is in a coma. The small handful of shops that remain seem run-down, and a number of them happen to be sex shops, adding an edge of seediness to the centre’s already grim and creepy atmosphere. The ruins of shops that were abandoned without actually being cleaned out beforehand scatter about the periphery of the building’s otherwise cavernous hallways. A broken photocopier covered in tumbling piles of books and manuals collects dust outside of what presumably was once an office; nearby lies a pile of debris including more broken machinery, tangled wires and a ripped down Venetian blind. Around the corner, a male mannequin stands alone in an otherwise empty corridor full of closed shops, wearing a t-shirt but no trousers. The escalators are no longer operational, and although I’m not sure about the status of the elevators, I wouldn’t take my chances even if they were. Oddly, there’s virtually no graffiti inside. But it sure is grimy.
My friend and I encounter roughly ten people throughout the whole building in the hour that we were there, and this is at lunch time on a Tuesday. It all starts to feel quite apocalyptic.
What could be done with the Clal Centre now? The Muslala Arts Collective has some ideas. The group has taken to renovating the building’s top floor and rooftop as a communal green space with an organic urban farm and organic beehives, a dance and yoga space, café, and reading corner. A playground is also in the works. It’s a noble endeavour – but only time will tell if it’s enough to save the Clal Centre.













