Showing posts with label Durban. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Durban. Show all posts

Monday, December 24, 2012

Interior, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban

Here's a peak inside the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban. Designed by Powers & Powers and built in 1947.

University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban

University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban

University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban

University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban

Reference:
Durban Deco Directory

Monday, October 1, 2012

Damelin City Campus, Durban

Damelin City Campus, Durban

This is the Damelin City Campus in Durban at least it was in 2003. I think they've moved to another building since then. I wonder what this building is like now?

Friday, July 27, 2012

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Manhattan Court, Durban

Manhattan Court, Durban

This is Manhattan Court, an apartment building in Board Street, Durban. In 2003, when I took these photos, it was being painted and it looks great in these colours. Manhattan Court was design by Frohlich and constructed around 1937.

Manhattan Court, Durban

Manhattan Court, Durban

Reference: Durban Art Deco

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Memorial Tower, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban

Memorial Tower, University of KwaZulu-Natal

This is the Memorial Tower at the Howard College Campus at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban. It was designed by Powers & Powers and built immediately after the Second World War in 1947.

Reference:
Durban Deco Directory

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Shops & Flats, Durban

Shops & Flats, Durban

This Art Deco building housing 3 shops with flats on the upper floors is in Victoria Street, Durban.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Ebrahim Court, Durban

Ebrahim Court, DurbanThis great little deco building, Ebrahim Court, is in the Indian quarter of Durban.

I really like the strong horizontal feel emanating from the banding at the roof line. Four and a half shops wide and only two tall helps as well.

And while the Art Deco decorative piece breaking the horizontal is good but the star-shaped element above the door is wonderful.

Ebrahim Court, Durban

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Victory Lounge, Durban

Victory Lounge, DurbanThe Victory Lounge has been a landmark on this Durban corner, Grey and Victoria Streets, since 1946.

The building may have seen better days but it is great to see the original business still there.

No prizes for picking the portholes and squat flagpole as my favourite parts.

Victory Lounge, Durban

Reference:
Victory Lounge website

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Sayed Fakroodeen Building, Durban

Sayed Fakroodeen Building, DurbanI was browsing through my pictures this evening looking for a building for today's blog post and came across this little beauty.

The Sayed Fakroodeen Building on the corner of Prince Edward and Cross Streets, Durban is typical of many of the buildings in and around Grey Street that belonged to local Indian businessmen. Shops at street level with a verandah providing shade for the customers on the footpath. On the upper floors, accommodation, perhaps for the traders and their families.

With the Sayed Fakroodeen Building, the second storey balcony is enclosed providing more living space and also serves as the base of an open terrace area for the third storey residents.

Sayed Fakroodeen Building, DurbanThe Sayeed Fakroodeen who put his name to this building in 1937 may be the same man who joined with other young Muslims in Durban in 1934 to found the Muslim Darul Yatama Wal Masakeen (the Muslim Home for Orphans and Destitutes). A Sayed Fakroodeen was on that first committee in 1934, serving as Treasurer.

The Institute celebrated their 75th anniversary in 2009 and now has several homes caring for orphans and the aged.

Whether there were one or two Sayed Fakroodeens in Durban in the 1930s we can acknowledge the remarkable legacies that have been created for the city. A wonderful Art Deco building with shops and accommodation and, with a group of associates, an organisation looking after the less fortunate of the Durban Muslim community.

Sayed Fakroodeen Building, Durban

References:
Durban Art Deco website
History of Muslims in South Africa, A Chronology by Ebrahim Mahomed Mahida
Darul Yatama Wal Masakeen website

Monday, August 23, 2010

Empire Court, Durban

Empire Court, DurbanEmpire Court in one of many Art Deco style buildings in the Grey Street district of Durban. It is a substantial building with shops at street level and apartments on the two upper floors.

Grey Street is the Indian part of town and that is reflected in many of the buildings from the 1930s and 40s that bear the family names of the local businesses. Another common theme for building names in this area is the British Empire as is the case here. Of course both South Africa and India were part of the British Empire.

Empire Court dates from around 1937 and the facade has a rich mixture of Art Deco elements. Diamonds, horizontal stepped lines and many other patterns comprising of geometric shapes. Also of note are the decorative flagpole holders and it is a shame that the flagpoles themsleves are no longer present.

Empire Court, DurbanThe building addresses its corner site with a curved verandah and balcony but the roofline maintains the rectangular lines of the rest of the building. This reminds me of the corner section of Wikianos Supermarket in Asmara, although in that case the roofline extends over the lower floors provding shade for the balcony area where Empire Court appears to have an open terrace above its curved balcony.

Reference:
Durban Deco Directory

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Broadway Court, Durban

Broadway Court, Durban

Broadway Court in Durban was designed by Obel & Frolich and constructed in 1937.

Broadway Court, Durban

Reference: Broadway Court, artefacts.co.za

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Surrey Mansions, Durban

Surrey Mansions, DurbanTomorrow, at the Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban, at 4:30 am (!!!) Australian Eastern Standard Time, the Australian football (soccer) team, the Socceroos, take on Germany in their first game of the 2010 World Cup.

So it's an early night and an early wake-up call for me but not before I show you one of the best Art Deco buildings in Durban.

Surrey Mansions dates from 1934. It was designed by Langton & Barbourne and is a knock-out building.

There is some decoration at ground level, especially around the entrance but most of the action is high up on the top floors.

Surrey Mansions, Durban

One the small rounded balcony and along the wall below the open terrace, panels featuring stylised Art Deco floral forms are separated by groupings of five chevrons.

Surrey Mansions, Durban

The most striking elements are, however, the series of winged lions that sit on the spandrels between the windows, each one decorated with pieces of broken glass or tile.

Lion, Surrey Mansions, Durban

Winged creatures are a feature of Durban Art Deco as the birds on Broadwindsor and the mythical creatures on the Enterprise Building and Victoria Mansions attest.

Reference: Durban Art Deco website

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Old Mutual Building, Durban

Old Mutual, Durban

While nowhere as grand as the former Old Mutual headquarters in Cape Town, the Old Mutual building in Durban has a certain substance and style to it.

I photographed it in 2003 and I haven't been able to find out much about it.

Emporis.com lists a postmodern skyscraper as the Old Mutual Centre in Durban and one of the photos on their site shows this older building sitting in the shadows of the skyscraper.

A more concerning report, however, on realestateweb.com.za from November 2009 details the refurbishment of Mutual Mall including this paragraph.

The four previous structures included the magnificent 31-storey A-grade tenanted office block, Old Mutual Centre; 300 Smith Street, which is an economical 18-storey office block which has undergone an upgrade to an A-grade building; and Gardiner House and Mutual Building which were demolished to create additional parking - about 400 additional bays resulted in a total of 800 bays (3 per 100m²).

I don't know for sure but this doesn't read well for the Old Mutual buildng in my photo.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Berea Court, Durban

Berea Court, Durban

Berea Court (1935) was designed by architects Langton & Barbourne and sits on a busy thoroughfare in Durban.

The face of the building features lions heads, stylised sunbursts and a single balcony on the top floor. The entrance is very handsome and the addition of a modern security gate has been done in a respectful way.

Berea Court, Durban

At the rear, the apartments are accessed via long cantileveled walkways while the liftshaft features a variety of geometric shaped windows.

Berea Court, Durban

One of the main features of Berea Court however, is the nautical themed leadlight windows in the apartment doors on the lower floors. They are all different with ships on some and lighthouses on others.

Berea Court, Durban

Berea Court, Durban

On the upper floors the leadlight windows are simple floral forms, a theme that is repeated in the interior doors.

Berea Court, Durban

Monday, January 11, 2010

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Dominion Court, Durban

Dominion Court, Durban

Dominion Court in the Grey St or Indian area of Durban harks back to South Africa being part of the British Empire. A nearby building is called Empire Court.

Dominion Court, Durban

The building has several Art Deco features. A flagpole with a nice example of a rule of three decoration at the base.

Dominion Court, Durban

The central panel below the second storey balconies bears a stylised sunburst that could also represent the Union Flag of the United Kingdom. The bays either side are decorated with a tapering horizontal stepped design.

Dominion Court, Durban

Dominion Court has seen better days but with a bit of work could become a very stylish building once again.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Prefcor Building, Durban

Prefcor Building, Durban

This is the Prefcor Building in downtown Durban.

The bulding was originally Payne Bros Department Store. The Facts About Durban website says that when the store opened in 1938 it had the longest escalator in the Southern Hemisphere and local children used to visit the store just to ride on it.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Chester House, Durban

Chester House, Durban

Chester House, DurbanChester House, dating from 1935, was designed by Cowin, Powers and Ellis.

The metal framed windows and horizontal spandrels provide contribute to a very interesting facade. However the rounded columns stretching the full height of the building to the open balcony on the top floor really emphasise the vertical nature of the building.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Berea View, Durban

Carlisle Street, DurbanI've written before about Carlisle Street in Durban. This photo shows this wonderful collection of Art Deco buildings in located in this street.

From left to right they are Berea View, Mount View, Vel-vet Mansions and Carlisle Castle.