Murabba Palace, Riyadh

Murabba Palace, Riyadh
Murabba Palace, Riyadh · via Wikimedia Commons
NAJDI MUDBRICK – 1938 – RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA

Murabba Palace, Riyadh

King Abdulaziz’s square palace of mudbrick and tamarisk – the building where modern Saudi Arabia was governed in its founding decades, preserved amid the towers of new Riyadh.

At a glance

Type
Royal palace, now museum
Period
1936-1938
Style
Najdi mudbrick architecture
Location
King Abdulaziz Historical Centre, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Coordinates
24.6480, 46.7102
Patron
King Abdulaziz Al Saud

Overview

The Murabba Palace – the Square Palace – was built by King Abdulaziz, founder of Saudi Arabia, as his court and residence outside the walls of old Riyadh, six years after he proclaimed the kingdom in 1932. Adobe walls of sun-dried mud, roofs of tamarisk trunks and palm fronds, and triangular Najdi crenellations house the rooms where the king received Roosevelt’s envoys, oil concessionaires, and tribal delegations.

History

The palace was the seat of Saudi government in the formative years when oil began to flow and the kingdom entered the world stage; King Abdulaziz lived and ruled here until his death in 1953. Spared the demolition that erased most of mud-built Riyadh, it was restored for the kingdom’s 1999 centennial as the heart of the King Abdulaziz Historical Centre, beside the National Museum.

Architecture and Design

The two-storey palace surrounds a square court; its majlis halls keep their painted ceilings, carved doors, and the king’s Rolls-Royce era furnishings. Najdi architecture – thick adobe insulation, small openings, roof terraces for desert nights – shows its climatic intelligence beside the glass towers it preceded.

Cultural significance

Murabba is the birth-room of the Saudi state, the architectural witness of the kingdom’s founding generation. With Diriyah’s UNESCO-listed At-Turaif nearby, it anchors the official memory of Najd in a city otherwise transformed beyond recognition.

Visiting today

The palace opens with the National Museum complex, Saturday to Thursday; combined visits cover the king’s majlis, the historic cars, and the museum’s sweep of Arabian history from prehistory to unification.

Getting there

The Historical Centre is in the Murabba district of central Riyadh, reachable by the new metro’s Orange line or taxi; the Masmak fortress of the 1902 reconquest is ten minutes south.

Sources and resources

📷 Diventa un fotografo di Cultural Heritage Online

Condividi le tue foto dei luoghi: restano pubblicate con la tua firma come autore. Più vengono viste, più ti fai conoscere — e presto un concorso premierà le foto più apprezzate.

Accedi o registrati gratis per aggiungere una foto
📋 Copy & share on social
Scroll to Top