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Houghton Estate

Houghton Estate

FieldValue
nameHoughton Estate
pushpin_mapSouth Africa Gauteng#South Africa#Africa
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameSouth Africa
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1Gauteng
subdivision_type2District
subdivision_type3Municipality
subdivision_name3City of Johannesburg
subdivision_type4Main Place
subdivision_name4Johannesburg
established_titleEstablished
government_typeCity of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality
leader_partyDA (Ward 73), ANC (Ward 67)
leader_titleCouncillor
leader_nameMarcelle Ravid (Ward 73), Sihlwele Myeki (Ward 67)
area_footnotes
area_total_km26.94
population_footnotes
population_total7867
population_as_of2011
population_density_km2auto
demographics_type1Racial makeup (2011)
demographics1_footnotes
demographics1_title1Black African
demographics1_info139.4%
demographics1_title2Coloured
demographics1_info22.0%
demographics1_title3Indian/Asian
demographics1_info322.4%
demographics1_title4White
demographics1_info434.3%
demographics1_title5Other
demographics1_info52.0%
demographics_type2First languages (2011)
demographics2_footnotes
demographics2_title1English
demographics2_info160.2%
demographics2_title2Zulu
demographics2_info28.0%
demographics2_title3Afrikaans
demographics2_info35.7%
demographics2_title4Northern Sotho
demographics2_info43.9%
demographics2_title5Other
demographics2_info522.3%
timezone1SAST
utc_offset1+2
postal_code_typePostal code (street)
postal_code2198
postal2_code_typePO box
area_code_typeArea code

Houghton Estate, often simply called Houghton, is an affluent suburb of Johannesburg, South Africa, north-east of the city centre. The area was designated for white residents as part of the Group Areas Act during the apartheid era and became known as one of the city's upper-class neighbourhoods.

Historically, the area has attracted a significant number of Jewish residents and is the home of Johannesburg's flagship Orthodox synagogue, Great Park Synagogue. Helen Suzman, a Jewish politician represented the suburb as Member of Parliament for Houghton from 1953 to 1989. Suzman was succeeded by Tony Leon.

The suburb is also known for being the home of the late president, Nelson Mandela.

History

Houghton was developed as a residential area around the turn of the 20th century, primarily by the Johannesburg Consolidated Investment Company (JCI). The suburb was laid out by surveyor Gustav Arthur Troye.

Geography

Communities

Houghton Estate has traditionally been informally divided into Upper and Lower Houghton. Upper Houghton is the southern and south-eastern portion located on a ridge, while the northern Lower Houghton is flatter and has a grid street pattern, with parts on both sides of the M1 freeway. Upper Houghton has been declared a National Heritage Area.

Upper and Lower Houghton are separated by the East-West section of Houghton Drive and part of Louis Botha Avenue. Small sections of Upper Houghton lie east of Louis Botha Avenue (bordering Observatory), and west of the north–south section of Houghton Drive (bordering Parktown and Hillbrow). Houghton is surrounded by wealthy suburbs in all directions, except south, where Upper Houghton borders less-affluent suburbs like Yeoville and Hillbrow.

Architecture

Historically a wealthy area, it contains many mansions on big stands, blocks of flats, as well as office parks (developed on the sites of former homes) on streets close to the M1 and on Louis Botha Avenue. Houghton is architecturally varied.

There are good examples of art deco buildings (particularly some of the flats) and homes such as Silver Pines (1936). The house was designed by Swiss architect Theophile Schaerer for Rand pioneer and German Jewish migrant, Bernard Kaumhelmer, father of anthropologist, Ellen Hellmann. And many of the large houses in the 1930s are good examples of the Modern style inspired by the work of Le Corbusier (Chipkin 1993), including Stern House (1935) designed by Rex Distin Martienssen and partners, as well as House Marks (1940) by Harold Le Roith.

Architect Piercy Patrick Eagle, also responsible for Jeppe High School for Boys and King Edward VII High School, designed 36 Houghton Drive (1919) in the Arts and Crafts style. Normandie (1934) was also built in this style and designed by Harold Wolseley Spicer. The home was later purchased by Dr Polonsky in 1939. A year later, his son, Antony Polonsky, a Holocaust scholar, was born in the house. Mourgana (1927) is also built in this style and was designed by Walter and Cyril Reid.

House Suzman (1937) was designed by J.C. Cook & Cowen in the Spanish Mission style for the couple, Saul Suzman and Betty Sonnenberg, daughter of Max Sonnenberg. They were the parents of actress, Janet Suzman.

Noordhoek (1938) was built in the Cape Dutch Revival style and designed by Albert Hoogterp. The house was commissioned by stockbroker Maurice Lipschitz.

The suburb, particularly Lower Houghton, is currently experiencing rapid redevelopment. Although many plots had already been subdivided in two, there is now a trend towards the development of cluster homes. This redevelopment is sanctioned by the City of Johannesburg's Regional Spatial Development Framework. The city sees many positive aspects to the redevelopment, but it is not uncontroversial and has resulted in the destruction of many traditional houses.

Demographics

Religion

As with many suburbs in the North-East of Johannesburg,{{cite thesis|author=Rubin, Margot W|title=The Jewish Community of Johannesburg, 1886-1939: Landscapes of Reality and Imagination|url=http://hdl.handle.net/2263/28071|location=University of Pretoria|degree=MA|year=2006

There is also a Muslim community that has expanded in the northern suburbs since the repeal of the apartheid-era Group Areas Act. A musallah was established in the east of the suburb, and, in 2011, a mosque, Masjid ul Furqaan was built by the Houghton Muslim Association on the site of the mussalah. Another, larger mosque on West Street, visible from the M1 freeway, was, after delays, completed in 2013 by the Houghton Muslim Jamaat.

Economy

Retail

There are few shops in Houghton itself, apart from convenience stores in petrol stations, but the area is close to numerous commercial nodes in Johannesburg, including those in Oaklands, Norwood, Killarney, Rosebank and Sandton.

Parks and greenspace

Houghton has two golf courses, Houghton Golf Club (1914) and the Killarney Golf Club (1903). There is also a large public park, The Wilds (which has been described as "notorious" for muggings and crime). A large sports club, the Old Edwardian Society (known as Old Eds), which includes a separate Virgin Active gym, is in Houghton.

Education

There are a number of well known schools in Upper Houghton: King Edward VII School (1909), a public school for boys, also known as KES), along with its associated primary school, King Edward VII Preparatory School, known as KEPS, and St John's College (1907) a private Anglican school historically only for boys, while Roedean School (South Africa), a private girls school, is close by in Parktown. Houghton School (a public primary school) is in Lower Houghton.

Law and government

Government

Lower Houghton, and a small part of Upper Houghton, bordering Observatory, are part of Region E of the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality, and are currently (as of 2014) included in Ward 73, while most of Upper Houghton is part of Region F of the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality, and is part of Ward 67.

Politics

During the apartheid era, the Houghton constituency in the whites-only parliament was represented by opponent of apartheid Helen Suzman until 1989, and was, for a period in the 1960s, the sole seat of the Progressive Party in Parliament.

Crime

Lower Houghton is part of the SAPS Norwood Police Station precinct, while Upper Houghton is part of the Hillbrow Police Station's precinct.

Infrastructure

Roads

Houghton is centrally located, straddling the M1 freeway, with interchanges at Glenhove Road (M1 N & S), Eleventh Avenue (M1 S), Riviera Road (M1 N), 1st Avenue (M1 S) and Houghton Drive (M1 N). Multiple metropolitan routes cross Houghton, including the M16, M20, M31, R25, and M11 (Louis Botha Avenue).

The grid street pattern in Lower Houghton consists mostly of numbered Streets and Avenues on both sides of the M1. Avenues run east–west, while Streets run from north to south. Avenue counting begins in the south with First Avenue (part of Metropolitan Route M16), and ends in the North with Seventeenth Avenue, while Street counting begins in the east with 1st Street, and ends in the West at 9th Street, with the numbered grid interrupted by Central, West and River Streets. North–south streets in Upper Houghton are generally named after trees, while east–west roads are named after Christian saints.

Lower Houghton and Upper Houghton are linked by Louis Botha Avenue, Houghton Drive, and the steep and winding Munro Drive, a National Monument which has a viewpoint with a view over the northern suburbs of Johannesburg.

Public transport

Louis Botha Avenue, in the east of the suburb, is an important minibus taxi route linking Hillbrow to Alexandra, and, as of 2014, construction began on the expansion of Johannesburg's Rea Vaya bus rapid transit system to Louis Botha Avenue. A Gautrain bus feeder route (numbered RB5) runs past the office parks on West Street, linking to the Rosebank Gautrain Station.

Notable people

Mandela Mansion, Houghton Estate, Johannesburg, 2014. Well-wishing mementos have been left in the foreground.
  • Nelson Mandela, who died in December 2013 at his Lower Houghton home, which became a site of remembrance in the immediate aftermath of his death. His residence was on the corner of 4th Street and 12th Avenue.

  • Janet Suzman, an actress who lived at House Suzman on 8th Avenue in Lower Houghton in a home commissioned by her parents.

  • Antony Polonsky, an eminent Holocaust scholar born and raised in Normandie, a home commissioned by his parents.

  • Reza Shah Pahlavi, a former King of Iran, lived in exile at 41 Young Avenue in Upper Houghton, between 1942 and his death in July 1944.

References

References

  1. "Sub Place Houghton Estate". Census 2011.
  2. [https://www.theheritageportal.co.za/notice/heritage-houghton-beautiful-past-and-uncertain-future%C2%A0 Heritage Houghton - A beautiful past and an uncertain future] The Heritage Portal. Retrieved on 5 February 2025
  3. Tigay, Alan M.. (1994). "The Jewish Traveler - Hadassah Magazine's Guide to the World's Jewish Communities and Sights". Jason Aronson.
  4. Saks, David (22 July 2015). [https://www.sajr.co.za/great-park-synagogue-steeped-in-tradition/ Great Park Synagogue – steeped in tradition] ''The South African Jewish Report''. Retrieved on 5 February 2025
  5. Wende, Hamilton (21 April 2011). [https://mg.co.za/article/2011-04-21-the-mosque-next-door/ The mosque next door] ''The Mail & Guardian''. Retrieved on 5 February 2025
  6. Cowell, Allan. Dugger, Celia W. (1 January 2009) [https://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/01/world/africa/01iht-suzman.3.19030240.html Helen Suzman, anti-apartheid leader, dies at 91] ''The New York Times''. Retrieved on 5 February 2025
  7. Leon, Tony (9 January 2009). [https://forward.com/news/14910/helen-suzmans-fight-to-put-things-right-03137/ Helen Suzman’s Fight To ‘Put Things Right’] ''The Forward''. Retrieved on 5 February 2025
  8. Musiker and Musiker 2000:137
  9. (2 May 2014). "Troyeville".
  10. "houghton heritage trust".
  11. "Delight after Upper Houghton is declared a national heritage area". IOLProperty.
  12. Celarent, Barbara (July 2012). [http://home.uchicago.edu/aabbott/barbpapers/barbhell.pdf Rooiyard: A Sociological Survey of an Urban Native Slum Yard by Ellen Hellmann. Review by: Barbara Celarent] Chicago Journals. Retrieved on 5 February 2025
  13. [https://www.theheritageportal.co.za/plaque/silver-pines Silver Pines] The Heritage Portal. Retrieved on 5 February 2025
  14. [https://www.citizen.co.za/rosebank-killarney-gazette/news-headlines/2021/01/28/from-nearly-demolished-to-heritage-site/ From nearly demolished to heritage site] ''The Citizen''. 28 January 2021
  15. [https://www.theheritageportal.co.za/plaque/house-marks House Marks] The Heritage Portal. Retrieved on 5 February 2025
  16. [https://www.theheritageportal.co.za/plaque/36-houghton-drive 36 Houghton Drive] The Heritage Portal. Retrieved on 5 February 2025
  17. [https://www.theheritageportal.co.za/plaque/normandie Normandie] The Heritage Portal. Retrieved on 5 February 2025
  18. [https://www.theheritageportal.co.za/plaque/mourgana Mourgana] The Heritage Portal. Retrieved on 5 February 2025
  19. [https://www.theheritageportal.co.za/plaque/house-suzman House Suzman] The Heritage Portal. Retrieved on 5 February 2025
  20. [https://www.theheritageportal.co.za/plaque/noordhoek Noordhoek] The Heritage Portal. Retrieved on 5 February 2025
  21. (21 April 2011). "The mosque next door".
  22. "West Street Shul South Africa".
  23. "About Us".
  24. "Contact Details".
  25. (July 12, 2013). "Houghton's West Street mosque".
  26. Walliser, Grant. (27 August 2008). "The great Saudi Arabian mosque hypocrisy".
  27. Musiker, Naomi. (1999). "Historical dictionary of Greater Johannesburg". Scarecrow Press.
  28. (18 May 2012). "The Wilds no longer a safe spot to climb". IOL.
  29. "Contact Us".
  30. "Regional Map - Region E".
  31. "Archived copy".
  32. (January 2009). "Helen Suzman, Relentless Challenger of Apartheid System, is Dead at 91". The New York Times.
  33. "Helen Suzman, member of Parliament for Houghton, is elected as national president of the Progressive Federal Party. | South African History Online".
  34. "Houghton residents tackle crime".
  35. "Google Alert – Smash and Grabs Hotspots".
  36. "We'll always have Munro Drive – Reviews – Johannesburg Live".
  37. "Three Historic Johannesburg Passes {{!}} The Heritage Portal". theheritageportal.co.za.
  38. "Goodbye Oxford Rd, hello Louis Botha…".
  39. "Construction".
  40. Adam Wakefield. (2013-12-09). "Metre-high pile of tributes at Mandela home". IOL.
  41. Wende, Hamilton (17 September 2010). [https://mg.co.za/article/2010-09-17-royal-joburg/ Royal Jo’burg] ''Mail & Guardian''. Retrieved on 26 January 2026.
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