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Tehran
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Tehran is
a cosmopolitan city, with great museums,
parks, restaurants, warm friendly
people. It deserves at least a few days
of your Iranian itinerary.

The city can be roughly divided into two
different parts - north and south. The northern districts of Tehran are more
prosperous, modern, cosmopolitan and
expensive while southern parts (also
called the 'downtown') is less
attractive but cheaper. At the time of the Zand dynasty, it was
a little town that was significant from
a strategic point of view. The first of
the Qajar kings, Agha Mohammed Khan,
named Tehran as the country's capital in
1778, and most of its growth started
during the reign of a subsequent Qajar
monarch, Fath-Ali Shah. The castle which
Agha Mohammed Khan had built was to
contain the new majestic buildings.
At the same time, the city's populace
was redoubled. Due to the increasing
significance of the city, gates, squares
and mosques were built and it was at the
time of Nassereddin Shah that the city's
master sketch was prepared and modern
streets were constructed. Later, huge
central squares like Toopkhaneh square
(now Imam Khomeini) and quite a few
military buildings were built. Event
though the the Qajar dynasty was in a
period of decline, Tehran soon took the
shape of a modern city. The structure of
large government buildings, new streets,
recreation centers, urban service
organizations, and academic and
methodical centers were started, even as
most of the old gates and buildings were
destroyed and the city's old
architectural fabric replaced by a
contemporary one.

Tehran has also earned itself the rather
unenviable reputation as a smog-filled,
traffic-clogged and featureless sprawl
of concrete bursting at the seams with
14 million residents. But you can also
find an endless number of nice and cosy
places in and around the city - if you
know where to look. Tehran is also a
city of parks and possesses more than
800 of them, all well-kept. The city is
nearly a mile high above sea level and
as a result is cooler than other cities
in the Middle East. Summer temperatures
are around 32°C or about 90-95°F. The
air tends to be very dry.
A combination of factors make Tehran a
pleasant place to visit: The dry climate
which is constantly cool (at least in
the evenings), the proximity of the
mountains, the parks and gardens where
flowers blossom all through the year,
the alleys of trees in the avenues or
even smaller streets, and even the water
that runs down from the upper city along
deep and wide gutters which look like
small rivers during spring. The Alborz
range on the north of Tehran, which
hosts the highest peak in Iran, provides
fantastic conditions for ski lovers in
the winter. In winter, the mountain
hotels and ski-clubs at Shemshak, and
Dizine are full several days a week.
Some specialist skiers consider the snow
value in northern Tehran to be one of
the most excellent in the world.
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