World's largest mural out of recycled goods in Syria

Syrian Moaffak Makhoul and a team of six artists pose with their Guinness World Record awards for the largest mural made from recycled material. Photo: Reuters
Syrian Moaffak Makhoul and a team of six artists pose with their Guinness World Record awards for the largest mural made from recycled material. Photo: Reuters


A group of Syrian artists in Damascus has created the world's biggest mural made of recycled materials, a rare work aimed at brightening public space in a city sapped by war and sanctions.

The brightly coloured, 720-sq metre work was constructed from aluminum cans, broken mirrors, bicycle wheels and other scrap objects and displayed on a street outside a primary school in the centre of the Syrian capital.

The mural's lead artist, Syrian artist Moaffak Makhoul, said the idea behind the project was to give ordinary people a chance to experience art and relieve some of the pressures of daily life as the country's three-year-old conflict grinds on.

"In the difficult conditions that the country is going through, we wanted to give a smile to the people, joy to the children, and show people that the Syrian people love life, love beauty, love creativity," he said.

Syrians walk through a decorated wall that won the Guinness World Record for the largest mural made from recycled material. Photo: Reuters
Syrians walk through a decorated wall that won the Guinness World Record for the largest mural made from recycled material. Photo: Reuters


Guinness World Records has declared the work the world's largest mural made of recycled materials.

Syria is sunk in a civil war that has killed over 140,000 people, forced millions more to flee their homes and devastated much of the country's infrastructure, economic activity and urban life.

Syrian artist Moaffak Makhoul poses near his decorated wall after it won the Guinness World Record for the largest mural made from recycled material. Photo: Reuters
Syrian artist Moaffak Makhoul poses near his decorated wall after it won the Guinness World Record for the largest mural made from recycled material. Photo: Reuters


Central Damascus has been relatively shielded from the worst fighting, although a little over a year ago rebels controlled a ring of suburbs and were launching incursions that threatened government control over parts of the city centre.

Gains over the past few months by President Bashar al-Assad's forces in Damascus' outskirts and along the nearby Lebanese border have strengthened the government's grip on the capital.

Syrians walk past a decorated wall that won the Guinness World Record for the largest mural made from recycled material. Photo: Reuters
Syrians walk past a decorated wall that won the Guinness World Record for the largest mural made from recycled material. Photo: Reuters


Makhoul said he saw the mural as a fitting project for the times because it could help ease the frustrations of normal people. "I found it to be the most appropriate time for this. Now is when we need to do something," he said.

The mural took about six months to complete and was finished in January with the help of about six artists.