View Full Version : #JHB Government Precinct-Mixed Use-Johannesburg CBD


thryve
August 5th, 2005, 11:53 PM
http://i18.photobucket.com/albums/b143/hsark5/PPPQ14_1.jpg

NAME: Gauteng Government Precinct
LOCATION: Rissik, Sauer, Pritchard, Fox Sts. (CBD)
STATUS: Proposed
FLOORS: N/A
HEIGHT: N/A
USE: Public space; office space


In Short...
Currently, the Gauteng government has very little organized office space in Johannesburg's CBD. However, that is about to change. A large project will create a large public square (similar to Times Square in NYC, or Yonge-Dundas Square in Toronto) called New Heritage Square. Many buildings will be torn down in the CBD to do this, however the remaining office buildings in the area will be used by the Gauteng government.

The project will address the government office space issue, the CBD revitalisation issue, as well as issue with lack of open green space in the CBD.

Project Background...
Since 1995, the Gauteng government has been renting some 120 000 square meters of office space in the CBD. "The creation of the government precinct means the provincial government's status will shift from being just a tenant in Johannesburg into one of the biggest property owners within the Johannesburg CBD," Shilowa said.

Tshepo Nkosi, spokesman for the Johannesburg Development Agency, welcomed the premier's announcement, describing it as an "affirmation of the work that the JDA has been doing in the past two years. We are delighted that once again the provincial government has shown a commitment to the regeneration of the inner city of Johannesburg".

Nkosi said the announcement is in line with the City of Johannesburg's vision of a world class African city.

http://www.joburg.org.za/2004/jan/govt2.jpg

Article...
THE Gauteng provincial government has finalised plans for its proposed new precinct in Johannesburg's CBD, centred around a new square to be created alongside the Beyers Naude Square.

The precinct will encompass a street underpass, skywalks joining buildings, underground parking, and the focal point, a square called the New Heritage Square, to the south of and adjoining the present Beyers Naude Square. The square, to be created from the demolition of 10 inner city buildings, will contain an amphitheatre, a multi-functional Tswana homestead and a symbolic obelisk and "Orientation Wall".

The precinct is to be called the Kopanong Gauteng Provincial Government Precinct, and a Heritage Impact Assessment (HIA) report outlining the plan, is presently lodged with the South African Heritage Resources Agency (SAHRA) for approval, and consideration and comment by the public. The reason for this is that five of the 10 buildings proposed for demolition are older than 60 years and therefore need SAHRA approval prior to demolition.

At present the Gauteng government's departments occupy offices stretching across the city, with some departments being split among different buildings.

The proposed plan brings those departments together in central area focused around the new square.

The precinct, designed by NOA Architects, is an effort "to ensure the democratisation of the urban environment whilst securing the historical significance of the CBD".

The precinct is to bordered by Pritchard Street in the north, Fox/Main streets in the south, Kort Street in the west and Rissik Street in the east, in what is referred to in the HIA as Complex 7.

Complex 7 is one of four options suggested by NOA, which they say offers "the highest overall ranking" in terms of the criteria stipulated by the province:

-the need to locate provincial government departments closer to one another for better communication and service delivery;
-the desire to remain within the city as an expression of confidence in the CBD; and
-the desire to "encourage property and business interest and confidence towards commercial/retail and inner city residential developments".

At present the GPG occupies eight buildings within the vicinity of Beyers Naude Square. Two of these buildings, SA Perm (People's Bank) and Litorn House, both in Commissioner Street, are to be demolished. Three additional buildings - Library Gardens Chambers, the Old Mutual Building, the Old Reserve Bank Building (a national monument) - are to be refurbished and occupied by the GPG in the future.

Two buildings owned by the GPG and presently vacant - Clegg House and SARB House on the corner of Simmonds and Commissioner streets - are to be demolished and replaced by a new building, to be called the Matlotlo Extension.

Demolitions:
Another eight buildings on the edge of Beyers Naude Square are to be demolished to make way for an adjoining square, an effort to revive the present square and extend it to expand open public space in the inner city. The report indicates that at present only three percent of space in the CBD is open public space.

In total 10 buildings are to be demolished, in terms of the HIA.

The report makes it clear that the architects are sensitive to the historic and architectural value of the buildings, but at the same time they need to acknowledge the "previously marginalised" who need to have their identity recognised in the city.

"Another complexity is how one introduces the values and identity of those who had no role in the defining and making of the urban environment without devaluing or erasing elements of historical significance or undermining the heritage of those whose values and identity makes up the existing built environment."

If demolition permission is granted, the SA Perm (People's Bank), the FNB Building, Litorn House, the Absa building, and Volkskas building between Market and Commissioner streets will be demolished. In addition, three buildings on the adjacent block - the New Library Hotel, the Rand Water Board building and Custom House - will also be demolished.

The façade of the Rand Water Board building will be preserved and become the façade of the new Matlotlo Extension, on the corner of Simmonds and Commissioner streets. It was recommended in 1976 that this six and a half storey building be declared a national monument, but this never happened.

The façade of the Volkskas building (now Absa) will also be retained, to remain where it is while the rest of the building will be demolished. The façade has engraved marble panels and bronze door panels, and the building is considered to be the "first major piece of architecture to be erected in Johannesburg by the emergent forces of Afrikaner finance capital . . .", according to renowned architect Clive Chipkin in his Johannesburg Style, Architecture and Society, 1880s-1960s.

The Square:
The new square will be called the New Heritage Square, and with the extension of Beyers Naude Square across Market Street, the new, larger square will have six heritage facades facing on to it. These will be: two facades of the Central Library, two facades of the historic Corner House on the corner of Simmonds and Commissioner streets, the Harrison Street façade of the City Hall, and the reconstructed Rand Water Board façade on the corner of Simmonds and Commissioner streets.

The new square will contain "indigenous heritage" in the form of a Stone Age Tswana homestead, constructed in steel and glass, "reminiscent of the pyramid located outside the Louvre in Paris", to be called the New Heritage Complex. A "New Heritage Bridge" will link it to Nedbank Place, on the corner of Market and Sauer streets.

"The building will be designed as a grand gateway or entrance on to the square from the underground parking," according to the report.

The building will have several functions: art and culture-related uses on the ground level, while the "upper levels will form a series of cascading terraces, housing restaurants and cocktail bars". Street trading will be allowed under pergolas around the complex.

There'll also be an amphitheatre just off centre of the new double-size square, with a 13-storey structure such as "an obelisk or column or feature within a fountain". Alongside this will be "an Orientation Wall" designed as "a link between the old and new facades" which will function as "a window of transparency, opening from government on to the urban community".

Near to the amphitheatre street vendor stalls will be constructed.

The ugly walls and non-functional kiosks surrounding the entrances and exits to the present underground parking of Beyers Naude Square will also be demolished to open up the square to the surrounding streets and proposed street cafes and restaurants.

The Nedbank Place wall facing the square will display digital advertising screens and billboards, "animating the square reminiscent to Time Square, New York". Seam lighting will be placed on the north-facing buildings, and restaurants and cafes are to be encouraged along this side, to allow a natural flow from the buildings on to the pavement and the square.

The square will be dotted with trees.

It is hoped that the new square will be used for a variety of events, including parades, religious gatherings, outdoor exhibitions, sporting activities and weekend markets.

Under the new square there'll be parking, and an underpass (to replace the four blocks of Market Street that will be incorporated into the square), which will begin before Kort Street to the west, and exit after Harrison Street in the east. The architects acknowledge that the underpass will "acquire sophisticated and innovative architectural and engineering approaches" to ensure that it "acquires conservation significance and be acknowledged as a heritage for future generations".

In addition, there'll be two gateways on to the square. The first is the Fraser Street Gateway, a decorative gateway on to the square from the Fraser Street entrance on the north side of the square. It will consist of a wire and perspex shelter, to be used by street curio traders. The second is the Market Street Close Gateway, and marks the start of the square from the west. The gateway will be defined by three rows of trees between Kort and Sauer streets, in contrast to the "hard materiality" of the Fraser Street Gateway.

The plan also includes four skywalks, linking buildings on the four corners of the enlarged square. The skywalks will consist of three floors, three storeys above the street level. Two of these skywalks will be enlarged to form two gateway towers, the Bank of Lisbon Tower and the Corner House Tower, both buildings on the western corners of the square.

These towers or skywalks will protrude over Market and Commissioner streets and will join the Corner House and the Avril Malan building, and the Bank of Lisbon building and Nedbank Place. They will consist of a triple volume open-air terrace with cafes, cocktail bars and restaurants overlooking the square. The facades of the towers will contain billboards and digital screens for advertising.

Democratic urban design:
NOA Architects feel that the development optimises all the elements of "democratic urban design": heritage, open public space and indigenous architecture, as well as encouraging night life in an area that has traditionally died as soon as workers leave the city.
"The overall celebration of heritage is the ensemble of a collection of colonial buildings, modernist buildings and the inclusion of the Heritage Complex which itself is a building that introduces elements and values of indigenous architecture, expressed in 21st century design and construction techniques."

Photo credits go to hsark and www.joburg.org.za

Inertia
August 9th, 2006, 02:59 PM
Any info on this development?

SA BOY
August 9th, 2006, 03:04 PM
not realy as we only have a few joburg members but they dont get into town as much as they should, nudge nudge wink wink boys.

mike2005
August 9th, 2006, 06:30 PM
nothing is happening yet as there are some legal wrangles with NIMBYs to sort out. If it goes ahead it will be AWSOME.

joburg
August 9th, 2006, 09:13 PM
Nothing is happening because certain key people are jumping up and down and placing as many obstacles in place of this development taking place.

In my opinion, their jumping up and down is totally unfounded, because the buildings to be destroyed have no significance whatsoever (the small building next to RWB, looks like a brothel, and probably is one), and if they are sooooo concerned about heritage, then why don't they do something about the buildings of REAL value which still stand mothballed, such as the Rissik Street Post Office and the Barbican?

JAB323
August 9th, 2006, 11:52 PM
very nice!

JAB323
August 9th, 2006, 11:53 PM
Nothing is happening because certain key people are jumping up and down and placing as many obstacles in place of this development taking place.


That's so typical.

mike2005
August 9th, 2006, 11:53 PM
Joburg I agree 100%. Those buildings are nothing special and this project will do wonders for the CBD and the city as a whole.

Durbsboi
August 10th, 2006, 08:27 AM
Joburg city needs this! I heard ABSA head office are relocating to Sandton? Is this true or is it just certain divisions?

SA BOY
August 10th, 2006, 08:30 AM
wouldent have thought so as they own ABSA towers South(big tower) and built ABSA towers north for like 600mil a few years ago, so that are centralised and compact. Only Nedbank did a runner with FNB and Standard bank still in the city

mike2005
August 10th, 2006, 02:31 PM
i have not heard anything about ABSA moving to sandton. I would change my bank account if they did.

hsark
August 10th, 2006, 04:30 PM
i really doubt absa would move from the cbd it wouldn't make sense now esp. with all the news about innear city revival plus it would cost them a fock lot they just bulit the absa towers north as saboy said plus there planning a new high-rise"its at an advanced stage so i hear ;)"

Jakes1
August 11th, 2006, 12:44 PM
Not to pee on anyone's fire, but other things need to be taken into account. opening up the sqaure will not necessarily rejuvinate the area. Why would we all flock to a governmental square over weekends? The idea has merit, but someone needs to restrain eager developers. Rather that destroying wonderful art deco and other architectural buildings, use the shells. Create places, not just an open space. Im with neil fraser on this one.

joburg
August 11th, 2006, 12:58 PM
Well my argument is that this is something NEW, which the city needs. We have a number of projects that involve rejuvinating old shells, but nothing that is brand new.

The shells that are currently there are just sitting there, and no one is doing anything about them anyway. And perhaps with the exception of SARB and Clegg House, the buildings don't have any architectural significance to the average man passing on the street. Unlike the Barbican or Antsteys, these buildings are quite mundane IMO. The new square, though, will be a reason for people to come into the city where previously, there hadn't been any reason.

And what the new square will do, because of it's large size, is give the city a great deal of confidence, and will hopefully create a ripple effect, which would mean that private developers come in and respond to the new square by adding new developments, such as retail, entertainment and residential nodes around it.

Right now people see the area as a No-Go zone. Someone is offering to remake the area into a zone that is 'Joburger-friendly,' and we're agonising over it.. You see, I just don't think there are many eager developers clamouring to get into the inner city... certainly not in comparison to the rest of the city. So when something comes along, I reckon we should jump at it.

mike2005
August 11th, 2006, 03:37 PM
i agree with you 100% joburg

joburg
August 15th, 2006, 02:22 PM
This is what Mr. Fraser wrote in his latest city column...
http://www.joburg.org.za/citichat/2006/aug14_citichat28.stm

"While I have no quarrel with the fact that the Provincial Government Precinct will be a positive factor in the regeneration process and that it will have a positive impact on the property market in the city, I cannot agree with the premier's perception that the revival of the city is dependant on the establishment of the precinct, nor that it will restore the CBD's status as the preferred location for business.

Clearly the CBD will be the preferred location for certain businesses. However, I don't believe that the CBD should consider itself in competition with Sandton, or any of the other economic nodes that have developed over the past decade or two. Nor do I believe that the major corporations that have relocated and invested heavily in other areas will return.

What I do think is that we need to ensure that the CBD is normalised to the extent that it features automatically in anyone's locational decision-making - that when they look at, for example Sandton or Midrand, they also look at the CBD. Or when those that have left and settled elsewhere require additional space they too consider the CBD as an option. For that to happen, there still is a lot of work to be done. "

Pule
November 27th, 2007, 02:14 PM
Can't these people catch a wake up and come up with an alternative for this?

joburg
November 28th, 2007, 12:04 AM
^^ Too many egos involved I think...

Can we say that this development has been canned?

Jakes1
November 28th, 2007, 09:35 AM
I think the gauteng provincial departments will still need to come up with a solution to their office space problem. But this project was quite a dream, and in its grandness, it might be canned.