Sursock Palace (French: Palais Sursock), is a residence located on Rue Sursock in the city of Beirut, Lebanon. The palace, which was completed in 1860 by Moïse Sursock,[1] was owned by Lady Cochrane Sursock, an advocate of preserving historic buildings in Lebanon.[2]
The palace, a symbol of the Sursock family's history, is located on Sursock Street, in the Rmeil district of Beirut. Sursock House is surrounded by gardens.[3] The palace faces the Sursock Museum, a villa from 1912 that was bequeathed to the city of Beirut by Nicolas Sursock and became a museum in 1961. After the Lebanese Civil War, it took 20 years to restore the palace before it reopened in 2010.