Maslak Pavilion
Levent and Ayazağa districts that connect the main road to the right of the Maslak Masir, the first structures in the environment, Sultan II. It was known that it started during the reign of Mahmud (1808-1839) and that the region was used as a hunting and resting place belonging to the sultans. Although the Maslak Masars, who were on the stage of history and gave a special position to the region, were not fully determined when and by whom they were built, most of them are dated to the period of Sultan Abdulaziz (1861-1876). During the years of prince Sultan II. Maslak Maslaks, who were allocated to Abdulhamid (1876-1909), witnessed the call of the Sultan to the Ottoman throne and is of particular importance for the Ottoman history.
In the middle of the 170 -acre forest terrain, the Maslak Masars, which are located in a grove that contains all shades of green, to the present day; Kasr-ı Hümâyûn, Mâbeyn-i Hümâyûn and Lemonluk, Tent Pavilion and Pasha Office were able to come. In a position that can see the point where the Bosphorus opened to the Black Sea very well, these structures, which are integrated with the green cover around them, constitute distinguished examples of wooden Ottoman housing architecture and decoration in the late 19th century. Today, Kasr-ı Hümâyûn has been repaired in the light of the document, memory and old photographs at hand and opened for a trip as a museum-port. Mâbeyn-i Hümâyûn and the tent pavilion and garden linked to him were repaired and repaired and brought to the identity of a cafeteria where visitors could sit and relax. Camellias that bloom in lemon, especially in winter, are the oldest examples of their species in the city. Maslak Pavilion Gardens can be allocated to national or international reception.