Randpark Ridge

Randpark Ridge
Randpark Ridge
Randpark Ridge
Randpark Ridge

 Randpark Ridge shown within Gauteng

Coordinates: 26°06′04″S 27°57′25″E / 26.101°S 27.957°E / -26.101; 27.957Coordinates: 26°06′04″S 27°57′25″E / 26.101°S 27.957°E / -26.101; 27.957
Country South Africa
Province Gauteng
Municipality City of Johannesburg
Main Place Randburg
Area[1]
  Total 9.00 km2 (3.47 sq mi)
Population (2011)[1]
  Total 18,033
  Density 2,000/km2 (5,200/sq mi)
Racial makeup (2011)[1]
  Black African 23.8%
  Coloured 3.2%
  Indian/Asian 7.6%
  White 64.1%
  Other 1.4%
First languages (2011)[1]
  English 67.4%
  Afrikaans 14.5%
  Zulu 4.3%
  Tswana 2.3%
  Other 11.4%
Postal code (street) 2169
PO box 2156
Website http://www.randparkridge.com

Randpark Ridge is a suburb of the city of Johannesburg, South Africa. It is located in the Roodepoort region (region C) of the Johannesburg metropolitan council. It fell into the town of Randburg during the apartheid era. Developed in the early 1980s and still relatively new, Randpark Ridge is bordered by several other suburbs including Weltevreden Park, Sundowner, Boskruin, Bromhof, Honeydew and Fairland. It is located on the far north-west extremity of Johannesburg.

History

The suburb has its origins as part of an old Witwatersrand farm called Boschkop named after the distinctive hill to north of the surburb, which is now the Boschkop Nature Reserve in the suburb of Boskruin.[2] An old brick farm house supposedly built on the land around 1860.[2] In 1903 the farm Boschkop was owned by a J. Labuschagne and he sold part of the original land and farm house to John Dale Lace.[2] He added on to the original Boer farmhouse adding two gabled sections to either side adding a further 25 rooms and a dam was built over the spruit (stream) that is a tributary of the Klein Jukskei River.[2] He would lose his country estate to the Standard Bank who sold it to an Irishman Tom Kelly in 1927 with land of 1300 acres.[2] Kelly would renovate and extend the old farmhouse naming it Hy Many after his Irish origins and called the dam Lace had built the same and which still bears that name today.[2] A tree lined drive to the farmhouse connected to the old Muldersdrift Road now called Beyers Naude Drive.[2] Kelly's daughter would sell the land in 1982 to the Gencor Trust and the land was rezoned for residential development.[2] Attempts were made to keep the house and have it listed as it was due for demolition but no funds could be found for its restoration.[2] By the early nineties it was run down and occupied by squatters before a fire destroyed the rear.[2] By 1994 the old farmhouse was bought by developers who demolished the burnt out section illegally and in 1996, fifteen townhouse were built around it.[2] The old farmhouse was modernized inside but the façade remains the same and has five original Jacaranda trees, possibly 90 to 100 years old.[2] Regarded as the oldest brick house in Johannesburg it now stands in Frangipani Crescent, Randpark Ridge.[2]

Current suburb

The suburb is chiefly residential, with a few nodes for commerce along the major routes that service the area. It is well planned and forms part of Johannesburg’s large man-made forest. Its proximity to both the city centre and Sandton make it an extremely popular area to live. It is, however, still close enough to the Magaliesburg so as to feel part of the countryside. The area is serviced by one highway, namely the N1 Western Bypass which connects the vicinity to Sandton and Pretoria to the north and to Roodepoort and Soweto to the south. The major arterial route is Beyers Naudé Drive (M5), which radiates from the inner city. Of importance are also John Vorster Drive and Ysterhout Drive (M6), as well as Christiaan de Wet Road (R564) running somewhat parallel to the freeway.

Rand Park High School along with Rand Park Primary School serve as the area’s public schools, and Trinityhouse High School and Aurora Private School are well-respected private schools in the area. The Randridge Mall and Rock Cottage are two well-known Randpark Ridge shopping malls, and several smaller malls exist for daily expenses. The prominent ridge (which gives the suburb its name) is protected as the Boschkop Nature Reserve, and is a prominent sight from most of western Johannesburg. Several parks abound including Essenhout Park and Hy Many Park. Much open land exists in the suburb especially to the west near to Honeydew.

Transport can be a problem for residents. The major routes are blocked in the morning and afternoon traffic, and this can make travel from the city centre much more difficult than usual. No train service runs near the area and thus it is buses and minibus taxis that offer the only public transport to residents. The nearest local airport is Lanseria Airport and the international airport is OR Tambo International Airport in Ekurhuleni.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Sub Place Randpark Ridge". Census 2011.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Davie, Lucille (21 February 2003). "Joburg's oldest buildings". City Of Johannesburg. Retrieved 31 October 2016.
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