2 Best Sights in Cairo, Egypt

Bayt al-Suhaymi

Islamic Cairo North

With gardens, a well, and a flour mill, this massive, 16th-century merchant's house, considered Cairo's best example of domestic Islamic architecture, seems more like a self-sufficient hamlet than it does a domicile. A charming, evocative little corner of Cairo, the house and adjacent alley have been restored. The entranceway leads to a lush courtyard that is totally unexpected from the outside. On the ground floor are the salamlik (public reception rooms); the haramlik (private rooms) are upstairs.

19 al-Darb al-Asfar St., Cairo, Cairo, Egypt
2-2787–8865
Sights Details
Rate Includes: LE80

Gayer-Anderson Museum

The Citadel

Also known as Bayt al-Kiritliya (House of the Cretan Woman), the museum consists of two Ottoman houses joined together, restored, and furnished by Major Gayer-Anderson, a British member of Egypt’s civil service in the '30s and '40s. The house is adorned with lovely pieces of pharaonic, Islamic, and Central Asian art, and a few oddities here and there. The reception room features a mosaic fountain at the center of an ornate marble floor, and the courtyard of the east house has the "Well of Bats," the subject of much storytelling in the neighborhood. James Bond’s The Spy Who Loved Me was partially shot in the reception hall and on the rooftop terrace. The house also inspired Gayer-Anderson's grandson, Theo, to become an art conservationist, and he was involved in the restoration of Bab Zuweila.

4 Ahmed Ibn Tolon Square, Cairo, Cairo, Egypt
2-2364–7822
Sights Details
Rate Includes: LE60