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Castle Gate Inns
The area of Kale Kapısı was and remains an important social and trade center for Kaleiçi, as indicted by the buildings dating from the Seljuk Period onwards remaining in the Balbey neighborhood to its north show. The locality was the last stop in trade routes reaching Antalya from the interior and so it houses inns, some of which are still remain today. The Kışla Inn, Zincirli Inn, Sipahioğlu Inn and adjacent and trapezium planned location of two inns that were built at the end of 19th century to the west of the Pazar Bath and which are called the “inn with one door” and the “inn with two doors” because of the number of their entrances, emphasize activity and importance of this locality in terms of trade and accommodation. The existent inns have been put into service as shopping and cultural areas for visitors today after being restored.

Among these, Inn with One Door is adjacent to Inn with Two Doors to its east and consists of 50 independent spaces surrounding a fine-long two-storied courtyard extending in a north-south direction. The courtyard of the inn, covering an area of 1500 square meters, was used as an area in which commercial commodities were marketed. The spaces built from rubble stones that have large arched openings in the downstairs were also used in order to shelter draught animals, as well as being employed as a shop, depot and as refectory areas. Regarding that the camels were used as draught animal, the aim for these spaces covered with their vaults so high can be better understood. The upper spaces built of timbre frame, lath and plaster technique, as also in many unrestored Kaleiçi houses, are lower than the ground-floor rooms and were used entirely for accommodation. While the spaces of the downstairs are souvenir shops today, the upstairs has been put into service as the Artistic Creational and Vocational Training Centre of the Muratpaşa Municipality from 2014. 

The Inn with Two Doors is in the west and has a rectangular plan. There are 11 two-storey spaces in its west and north and 12 single-storied spaces on its east side. Its building material and two-storied architecture is the same as the Inn with One Door; rubble stone and vault covering were used in the downstairs and timbre frame and plaster  on the upstairs. There is an original well for water in its large courtyard as in almost every inn building.