
DISCOVER Joburg's secret character with our features on the city's many diverse suburbs and places:
Suburbs
Newtown: Your guide
Newtown is being developed into a vibrant, mixed use area with a unique character based on existing cultural facilities.
Yeoville
FROM Time Square to House of Tandoor, every taste is catered for. Saturday in Yeoville is the place to party.
Linden
Tim Truluck's historical map of Linden gives interesting insights into the farms that gave rise to the suburb
The caring suburb of Malvern
Malvern, east of the city, is a caring, friendly suburb, where the
residents are getting together to improve their suburb and set a
standard of neighbourliness that other Joburgers could learn from.
Parkhurst
Parkhurst
is one of the city's oldest residential suburbs. You can read all about
its history, and other interesting facts, in a new brochure, the first
of many that will eventually be combined in a publication of all
Joburg's suburbs.
Barkhurst, Nappy Valley … or Parkhurst?
A
newly published brochure, 'Resident's Guide to Parkhurst', has
everything you need to know about the suburb, from community
information to municipal services - including some quirky snippets of
history.
Joburg's most secret place
There's a street in Joburg that is friendly and cosy, but its residents want to keep it secret.
History of Auckland Park
Columnist Neil Fraser finds out about historic Auckland Park, once a fashionable 'country' area favoured by the rich
Rock around the block: Stone houses of Mountain View
A
block in Hope Road, Mountain View, consists of a dozen rather wonderful
stone houses, built 100 years ago using thousands of tons of rock
quarried from the site.
Fietas: a close-knit community living not far from the city centre
Few
Joburgers have heard Fietas, a close-knit community living not far from
the city centre - until the apartheid axe fell in the seventies. But
parts of Fietas remain standing and give a sense of what it once might
have been.
A walk down Victorian Parktown
Take
a walk past the grand old mansions in Parktown, and take a peek inside
some of them. The Parktown & Westcliff Heritage Trust conducts
weekly tours of old Johannesburg, and one of those tours is Victorian
Parktown.
Rietfontein, a nature reserve within the suburbs
Rietfontein
offers the hectic, jolling Joburger a quiet, green space with small
game in which to unwind and take in those little natural wonders that
we are usually too busy to notice.
Greenside: History of Jo'burg's only dry suburb
There
is a suburb in Johannesburg that is "dry". Not because there's no water
available to the residents, but because Louw Geldenhuys, farmer,
politician and a deeply religious man, who owned the farm Braamfontein
over 100 years ago, didn't want alcohol supplied to blacks working on
the mines.
Soweto, city of contrasts
Soweto is a city of contrasts: luxurious mansions across the road from
tin shanties, green fields and streams around the corner from piles of
garbage, the biggest public hospital in the world with the world's
highest HIV infection rate, and a friendliness and cheerfulness that
disguises a high unemployment rate.
Alexandra
Alexandra
township survived demolition when other townships like Sophiatown were
flattened and rebuilt for whites. They were both "black spots" in the
middle of white suburbia, so why did Alexandra survive and others
didn't?
Fordsburg
Fordsburg boasts a number of confectioneries that offer a delicious array of goodies, all baked on the premises and very fresh.
Northcliff
One
of the city's most impressive ridges, Northcliff, has lost its towering
presence as homes and townhouses have encroached further and further up
its sides and summit. But its 360º view of Johannesburg is still
largely intact
Wemmer Pan
Wemmer
Pan, once the scene of happy times, then changed times with crime and
vandalism rampant, has once again been given a new lease on life - the
dam is dotted with rowers and the park is green again.
Observatory
The
site of the city's first observatory is still largely as it was when it
was built in 1905, still in use but open to the public once a month, to
admire the stars above the Gauteng sky.
Orange Farm
Orange
Farm is a squatter camp but also a land of dreamers - the hard-working
kind who day by day defy their poverty to testify to the triumph of the
human spirit.
Ivory Park
The sprawling shack settlement of Ivory Park once epitomised
hopelessness. But since 1999, small but steady dents have been made in
that despair, thanks to initiatives that have looked more closely at
the damaged environment and how people could live more harmoniously
with it.
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