Muizz Street also known as Al Moez Ladin Allah Al Fatemi Street and Located in Old Islamic area near Khan El Khalili and Gamalia. also has close to Bab Al Futuh in the north of Bab Zuweila. in 1997 the Egyptian Government carried professional plans for full renovation the whole street and Islamic budling to consider and turn the street and buildings to open-air Islamic Museum.

After Al-Qahira, the “city victorious,” was built by military commander Gawhar Al-Seqeli in 969 CE on the orders of the Fatimid caliph Al-Muizz Li-Din Allah as Egypt’s new capital, it soon became a place of opulent palaces and the host of the prestigious mosque-university of Al-Azhar. Of the many broad streets in the new city, Al-Muizz Street between Bab Al-Fotouh and Bab Zuweila was the most magnificent and the main thoroughfare of Fatimid Cairo.

Through the centuries that followed Al-Muizz Street maintained its position and encouraged Mameluke, Circassian, Ayyubid and Ottoman rulers to enhance its character by building splendid mosques, sabils (water fountains), kuttabs (Qur’anic schools), houses and wekalas (trade complexes) along its length.

The street was lined with soaring monuments displaying many styles of Islamic architecture and embellished with fine mashrabiya (woodwork) façades and painted mosaic and decorative domes. Among these are the Sultan Qalawun Complex, which consists of a palace, a madrassa (school) and a hospital, the School of Ibn Barquq, the Beit Al-Qadi, the Sultan Al-Saleh Negmeddin dome, the sabil-kuttab of Khesru Pasha, and the Mohamed Ali Pasha sabil.