Location
Capetown
The intention is to launch the first laboratory and presentation in
Capetown 1 February 2006. The project has been developed with Public Eye
- the laboratory will be set up at the Mayenzeke arts/community centre
in New Crossroads township in conjunction with the Mandlovu Development
Institute. The presentation will be liaised with the Cape Town Festival
in March 2006.
All activities will be aimed at interventions in the New Crossroads community
around the hub created by the hall and buildings associated with the Mandlovu
Development Institute. Next to this center are two adjoining pieces of
City-owned land for which community facilities have been planned. On these
three adjacent lots (erf 11307, where the church, Mandlovu centre and
a few churchyard-shacks are located, and the vacant lots, erf 13479 &
13480) is where we are going to set up the CascolandSA-laboratory, consisting
of
We are not going to offer solutions to key needs in the community, but
rather a collective proces, without hierarchy, stimulating cross-disciplinary
collaboration. The platform of our mobile village can put a spotlight
on relevant issues for New Crossroads, be an inspiration to residents
and offer a different approach/technique to adress issues from the known
township cultural expressions.
bed & breakfast facilities
a coffeeshop/meetingplace
a videohall
recycle architecture
recycle design
animation workshops
radio studio
and more
Many people pass through this area on route between Landsdown Road to
Koornhof St (one of the main roads in the area with public buildings and
shops). This creates opportunities for interventions in a series of public
spaces including a primary school and two childrens play areas as well
as markers to this area along the main arterial route off Landsdown Road.
Subsequently the results of this laboratory will be open to the public
at a 10-day presentation from 3 - 12 March 2006, in a festive athmosphere
with a set of linked activities.
March 2006 CascolandSA will relocate to the city, where we will have a
presentation somewhere between 3 - 24 March, during Cape Town festival
2006. We want to set up our mobile village at the Companys Gardens, around
the South African National Gallery (SANG). Liaised to the festival component
Nightvision (offering an evening programme in Longstreet), with our program
containing films and performances and the possibility to spend the night
in one of our objects, we expect to draw a large audience.
iMAYENZEKE eNewCrossroads (initiated, designed and facilitated by Mandlovu
- in partnership with a core of local residents) currently consists of
a suite of stand alone and interlinked community based-projects and activities
linked to heritage, arts and culture, tenure security, service delivery,
housing and, economic and tourism development.
Public Eye, a Capetown based not-for-profit artistsí organisation, started
in 1998 in order to facilitate and organise art events in public places,
and working in previously disadvantaged areas of the city.
The Mandlovu Development Institute has long-standing links to the communities
of New Crossroads and aims to promote a better theoretical understanding
of the dynamics of grassroots participation in development and to improved
development practices.
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New Crossroads
The three adjacent
lots (erf 11307, where the church, Mandlovu centre and a few 'churchyard'
shacks are located, and the vacant lots, erf 13479 & 13480), where
we are going to set up the CascolandSA-laboratory in collaboration with
Mandlovu/Mayenzeke.
Erf 11307: According to the 2003 investigation this site was unregistered
with the Council. We understand that it is leased to the African Apostolic
Church which has a church building on the site and acts as the lawful
occupants of the site. A number of small brick out buildings, a few "churchyard"
shacks and the temporary Mandlovu "Centre" are currently located
on this site.
Erf 13479: According to the 2003 student investigation, this site is registered
under Council and zoned as Public Open Space, meaning that it would need
to be rezoned for the project. According to recent information obtained
from the Council this site is currently "for sale".
Erf 13480: In 2003 the investigation showed this site to be registered
under Council. A subsequent investigation (2004) indicated that the site
was "owned" by the New Crossroads Old Age Home. There is no
clear evidence of an existing title deed or transfer of the land to the
latter which only exists on paper.
Local context

New Crossroads (NCR) has a unique history in the City of Cape Town. It
was built by the apartheid government in the early 1980s after much protest
and conflict from the people of Old Crossroads (OCR). The tenuous issue
of housing and the interaction in this regard between state and community
is one of mistrust, deceit and, empty promises. Despite promises to the
contrary, the new development did not meet with the requirements and demands
of the community. The eventual relocation of people from OCR and other
township settlements to NCR marked a loss of unity and individual identity
within the community. Since the relocation in the 1980s and, unlike the
former settlement in OCR, little social infrastructure exists or, is accessible
for local residents to enjoy social, meeting or, cultural activities inside
NCR. A Council owned and run Multi-Purpose Centre exists but is not perceived
to be fully accessible to local residents.
One of the overarching aims of the NCR project is to repair and heal some
of the pain of broken promises of the past and inspire younger and older
residents by introducing new, dignified spaces into their community that
can assist them to uplift themselves as they move forward into a brighter
post apartheid future.
The UCT student group that worked on this project ("Five Degrees
Architects") in 2003 made the following salient observations about
New Crossroads:
Some outdoor spaces are well used, but the quality of these spaces is
lacking. For Example, the nearby Children's Playground;
Other open spaces lack a sense of public ownership and definition;
A sense of disappointment may exist within the community regarding a public
park(and other social infrastructure) promised before relocation from
Old Crossroads but never delivered;
The urban environment has not been responsive to the cultural and historic
heritage of the community;
The site has heavy pedestrian traffic and can potentially become a node
in the fabric of New Crossroads;
There is a sense of social responsibility and organization which can be
re-enforced by the built environment;
At the moment there is poor social infrastructure for the provision of
healthcare, safety (pension payouts) and care of the elderly in general;
The area has tourism potential. With current tourism trends in South Africa
that are branching into the townships, New Crossroads is well positioned
to receive visitors;
There is an entrepreneurial spirit within the community (spaza shops,
daycare centres, sewing services, hair salons, craft making, baking, operating
from people's homes. There is an opportunity for the built environment
to respond to this.
The community seems to be open to multi-purpose buildings (churches double
as cruches and meeting spaces during the week)
As already noted, MANDLOVU has been facilitating the MAYENZEKE Urban Regeneration
Project or, initiative in New Crossroads since 2001. Given its iterative
and integrated nature, MAYENZEKE has found ways to talk to and, interact
with the memories and dreams of younger and older residents in the community.
All social infrastructure envisaged for New Crossroads adds built form
to activities (real and imagined) taking place in the community.
A precedent for one phase of the project has already been established
<ETH> a temporary "MANDLOVU MAYENZEKE Centre", built out
of wood and iron zincs, currently houses Mama Luke's Studio and a "virtual"
UVIMBA (Museum) Café, built in phases during 2004/05 by MANDLOVU
and local partners with support from the Royal Netherlands Embassy, private
donations and, sweat equity.
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