Here, the parking lanes are named after forgotten emperors. You don’t park in "Sector A." You park in , right next to a preserved section of the original Theodosian Wall. The ventilation grates are shaped like Byzantine crosses. And the floor? It’s a glass-reinforced polymer laid directly over ancient mosaics of griffins and grape vines.
After all, he too spent his life fighting for a parking spot in the center of the world. Elias Romanos is a writer based in Istanbul, specializing in the collision of ancient history and modern infrastructure. byzantium qpark
One frequent visitor, a 70-year-old historian named Dr. Sibel Akman, refuses to use the elevator. She walks the ramps every time. "In the mall above," she says, "people are buying fast fashion and frozen yogurt. But down here, in the Qpark? Time collapses. You are not parking a car. You are mooring a vessel in the harbor of an empire." Is Byzantium Qpark a disgraceful desecration of heritage? Many archaeologists think so. They call it "the tomb of history with a ticket booth." Here, the parking lanes are named after forgotten emperors