In the 1930s Johannesburg rose up from its foundations to become a world city in the midst of a world depression. In the building boom that followed the abandonment of the gold standard, the city developed an overwhelmingly art deco character which survives to this day.
The Englishness of the 1920s was eclipsed by the new modernism emanating from the United States: ziggurats rising into the New York skyline; rounded, streamline shapes from the fetish speed objects of the 1930s; projecting horizontal motifs and chevron friezes.
The pre-eminent architects of the period, JC Cook & Cowen and Obel & Obel, intoxicated by what they had seen and learned on visits to the great metropolises of the United States, competed with each other to design buildings that were taller, more luxurious, and more startling in their decorative details.
Explore their legacy in a tour that encompasses Astor Mansions, Castle Mansions, Anstey’s, Manners Mansions, Dorchester Mansions, Dunvegan Chambers and other great art deco piles.
Email mail@joburgheritage.co.za to book.
- GUIDES: Brian Kent McKechnie and David Gurney
- TIME: 14h00
- PARK: Sunnyside Park, Princess of Wales Terrace, Parktown
- COST: R300 for members and R350 for non-members
- DURATION: Approximately 3 hours
- MAXIMUM No: 50
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