Tegart fort

[2] This is probably due to the transliteration of the name to Hebrew and then back to Latin alphabet, along with the translator's wrong assumption that the most common way of writing this anglicised Scottish surname has to be applied ("Taggart" is far more widespread than "Tegart").

[6] The Tegart fort in Ma'alot-Tarshiha, now a police station, is being restored as a historical landmark, attracting the attention of preservationists and tourists.

[3] In the West Bank, several such forts, now known as Mukataa (Arabic: المقاطعة, "District") are used as offices and administrative centers of the Palestinian National Authority.

The Ramallah Mukataa, damaged by Israeli forces in the 2002 Operation Defensive Shield and the later siege during the Second Intifada, was later restored and added to under President Mahmoud Abbas, obscuring the lines of the original British structure.

Not all British Mandate police stations listed below correspond to the definition of a "Tegart fort", although they were all part of the same security building project from 1940 to 1941, with later additions.

The Tegart police fort at Latrun
Tegart police station, Nahalal .
The Latrun Museum
Tegart fort at Kibbutz Sasa
Metzudat Yoav, the Givati Brigade Museum in the former Iraq Suwaydan fort
Gesher Police Station
Ein Tina Police Station in Wadi Amud near Hukok