The Majorelle Garden is a masterpiece of landscape art and is one of the most visited places in Morocco. The garden is located between the new city and the ancient Muslim quarters of Marrakesh, named after its creator, the French artist Jacques Majorelle, who came to Morocco and settled in Marrakesh in 1917. In 1923, he acquired a land area of 1.6 hectares, located on the edge of the palm grove of Marrakech. The artist names his site Bu Saf Saf and builds on it a house in the Moorish style with the Berber tower Borge. In 1931, Majorelle invited the architect Paul Sinoir to design and build a villa in which the artist planned to place his studio and art workshops. The villa is made in the Moorish style with elements of cubism and art deco, painted in cobalt and ultramarine colors. The artist turned his plot into a lush tropical garden. He planted exotic and rare species of plants, the garden was decorated with fountains, ponds, arbors, pedestrian paths and alleys were created along which large multi-colored ceramic flowerpots with plants were placed. The garden of cacti and succulents is adjacent to palm, bamboo and banana groves. The surface of the ponds is covered with blooming lilies and lotuses. The garden is inhabited by many birds - bulbul, the singing of which is distributed throughout the garden, prairie, pigeons, blackbirds, flycatchers and others. In 1947, Jacques Majorelle opened his magnificent garden to the public. Visitors could take a walk in the garden, admire exotic plants and enjoy the coolness of fountains and ponds. However, family troubles and severe trauma, received by the artist in a car accident in 1955, significantly worsened the financial situation of Majorelle and forced him to sell part of his property. In 1961, the artist in serious physical condition was transported to France, where he died in Paris in October 1962. The Majorelle Garden has remained abandoned for several years, soon plans appeared to develop the site and create a modern hotel on its territory. The second date of his birth is the Garden of Majorelle owed to the couturier Yves Saint Laurent and the French industrialist and philanthropist Pierre Berger. During a visit to Marrakesh, they visited the garden, and upon learning of the upcoming sale of a building plot, they bought it from the widow of Jacques Majorelle in 1980. The artist’s house was renamed Villa Oasis, major restoration work was carried out in the garden, automatic irrigation systems were built, a collection of plants was significantly expanded, 20 gardeners were hired to take care of the garden, ponds and fountains. The ashes of Yves Saint Laurent, who died in 2008, are scattered in the rose garden of Villa Oasis, and a monument to the great couturier is erected here. In the studio of Jacques Majorelle (Blue Villa), the Berber Museum was opened in 2011, which displays personal collections of Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Berger - Berber jewelry, costumes, leather, ceramic, wood and textile products. Today, the Majorelle Garden is one of the most famous attractions not only of Marrakech, but of the whole of Morocco; more than 700,000 people visit it annually.