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Johannesburg
Johannesburg, also known as eGoli, is the most populous city in South Africa.
All About Johannesburg
The city is affectionately known as "Jo'burg", "Jozi" and "JHB" by South
Africans. Johannesburg is the provincial capital of Gauteng Province, the
wealthiest province in South Africa, and the site of the South African
Constitutional Court. The city is one of the 40 largest metropolitan areas in
the world, and Africa's only global city (classified as a gamma world city).
Whilst sometimes mistakenly assumed to be South Africa's capital city,
Johannesburg is not even one of South Africa's three official capital cities
(although Pretoria, which is part of the same province, is).
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Johannesburg is the capital of South Africa's smallest
- and richest - province, called Gauteng, a Sesotho name meaning "Place of
Gold". Gauteng makes up just 1,4% of South Africa's land area, but it is home
to more than a fifth of the population and produces a third of the country's
wealth. Gauteng is predominantly urban, consisting chiefly of industrial and
mining satellite towns surrounding the twin cities of Johannesburg and
Pretoria.
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Johannesburg is one of the world's few large
metropolitan areas to be based on neither an ocean port nor a major river. The
weather's balmy 10 months of the year, generally warm, but not as stiflingly
hot as many other African cities.It started life in 1886 as a gold-rush shanty
town, expected to last no more than a decade. But the gold proved so rich that
disputes flared over who controlled Johannesburg, culminating in a war that
changed military history - the Anglo-Boer war. By the nineteen twenties, the
city had outpaced every rival to become Africa's major commercial centre. |
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Johannesburg is a bit of a mouthful, which is why
South Africans invariably call the city "Joburg". The shorter name is creeping
towards respectability: the municipality recently decided to use "Joburg" on
all marketing and official stationery. There was talk at one point of giving
the city an African name like Egoli, meaning "city of gold", until that name
was hijacked by the country's longest-running television soap opera. |
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Johannesburg, also known as eGoli, is the most populous city in South Africa.
The city is affectionately known as "Jo'burg", "Jozi" and "JHB" by South
Africans. Johannesburg is the provincial capital of Gauteng Province, the
wealthiest province in South Africa, and the site of the South African
Constitutional Court. The city is one of the 40 largest metropolitan areas in
the world, and Africa's only officially designated global city (classified as a
gamma world city). Whilst sometimes mistakenly assumed to be South Africa's
capital city, Johannesburg is not even one of South Africa's three official
capital cities (although Pretoria, which is in the same province, is).
Johannesburg is the site of a large-scale gold and diamond trade due to its
location on the mineral-rich Witwatersrand range of hills. Johannesburg is also
served by O.R. Tambo International Airport, the largest and busiest airport in
Africa and a gateway for international air travel to and from the rest of
southern Africa. According to the 2001 Census, the population of the city is
more than three million. Johannesburg's land area of 1,644 km� is very large
when compared to other cities, resulting in a population density of only
1,962/km�. The population of the Greater Johannesburg Metropolitan Area is
almost eight million. Johannesburg also encompasses Soweto to the south west, a
township which the apartheid government established to accommodate the large
number of migrant workers. Contents [hide] 1 History 2 Government 3 Crime 4
Geography and climate 5 Demographics 6 Economy 7 Communications and media 8
Suburbs 9 Tourism 10 Sports teams and stadiums 11 Transport 12 Universities in
Johannesburg 13 Sister cities 14 References 15 See also 16 External links
History of Johannesburg
The farm where gold was first discovered in 1886. The Central Business District
of Johannesburg around 1931.Main article: History of Johannesburg The region
surrounding Johannesburg has been inhabited for millions of years. The
Sterkfontein Caves, to the north west, have produced the most complete skeleton
of a 3.3 million-year old hominid as well as close to 700 specimens of a
closely related species, Australopithecus africanus, among them Mrs Ples, which
is between 2.8 and 2.3 million years old. It is is theorised that the
Johannesburg region was inhabited by the nomadic Bushmen people around 100,000
years ago. The Bushmen is said to have lived in the area until the
Bantu-speaking people migrated into the area around the year AD 1060. The Bantu
people were Iron Age people who domesticated animals, farmed crops, worked
metal, made pottery, and lived in organised villages. The region remained
inhabited by both the Bushmen and the Bantu people. When Europeans arrived in
the area, small numbers of Boers started farms, but there was no major European
settlement until the 1880s, when gold was discovered in the region, triggering
a gold rush. Gold was initially discovered slightly to the east of present-day
Johannesburg, in Barberton. Gold prospectors soon discovered that there were
even richer gold reefs in the Witwatersrand. The town was initially much the
same as any small prospecting settlement, but as word spread, people flocked to
the area from all other regions of the country as well as from North America,
the United Kingdom, and the rest of Europe. As the value of control of the land
increased, tensions developed between the Boers, who founded the town and in
whose country (the ZAR) Johannesburg was located during the nineteenth century,
and the British, culminating in the Second Anglo-Boer War. The Boers lost the
war and control of the area was ceded to the British. When the Union of South
Africa was declared in 1910, this paved the way for a more organised mining
structure. Later the South African government instituted a harsh racial system
whereby blacks and Indians were heavily taxed, barred from holding skilled
jobs, and consequently forced to work as migrant labour on Johannesburg's
growing crop of gold mines. The South African government then instituted a
system of forced removals, moving the population of non-European descent into
specified areas. It is this system that created the sprawling shantytown of
Soweto (South Western Townships), one of the areas where blacks were forced to
live during the apartheid era. Nelson Mandela spent many years living in Soweto
and his Soweto home in Orlando is currently a major tourist attraction.
Large-scale violence broke out in 1976 when the Soweto Students' Representative
Council organised protests against the use of Afrikaans as primary language of
instruction, considered to be the language of the oppressors, in black schools.
Police shot into a student march, and 1000 people died in the following 12
months protesting the apartheid system. One of the most famous victims of the
massacre, Hector Pieterson, is commemorated with a large Museum dedicated to
his memory in Soweto. The regulations of apartheid were abandoned in February
1990, and since the 1994 elections, Johannesburg has been free of
discriminatory laws. The black townships have been integrated into the
municipal government system, and to some extent, the suburbs have become
multiracial. However, there has been a large-scale migration of businesses and
commerce away from the Central Business District and southern suburbs in favour
of the northern suburbs. This was fueled by a rise in the crime rate, serious
traffic congestion and inadequate public transport, and a more favourable tax
environment for landlords in the northern suburbs prior to the integration of
the city. Currently the Johannesburg Metropolitan Council is implementing a
large scale Inner City Revival project leading to many business moving back to
the inner city.
Government of Johannesburg
During the apartheid era, Johannesburg was divided into 11 local authorities,
seven of which were white and four black or Coloured. The white authorities
were 90 % self-sufficient from property tax and other local taxes, and spent
Rand 600 (USD $93) per person, while the black authorities were only ten
percent self-sufficient, spending Rand 100 (USD $15) per person. The first
post-apartheid City Council was created in 1995. The council adopted the slogan
"One City, One Taxpayer" in order to highlight its primary goal of addressing
unequal tax revenue distribution. To this end, revenue from wealthy,
traditionally white areas would help pay for services needed in poorer, black
areas. The City Council was divided into four regions, each with a
substantially autonomous local regional authority that was to be overseen by a
central metropolitan council. Furthermore, the municipal boundaries were
expanded to include wealthy satellite towns like Sandton and Randburg, poorer
neighbouring townships such as Soweto and Alexandra, and informal settlements
like Orange Farm. In 1999, Johannesburg appointed a city manager in order to
reshape the city's ailing financial situation. The manager, together with the
Municipal Council, drew up a blueprint called "Igoli 2002". This was a
three-year plan that called upon the government to sell non-core assets,
restructure certain utilities, and required that all others become
self-sufficient. The plan took the city from near insolvency to an operating
surplus of R153 million (USD $23.6 million).
Johannesburg Geography and Climate
Johannesburg is located in the eastern plateau area of South Africa, known as
the Highveld, at an elevation of 1753 metres. The city is located on a small
ridge called the Witwatersrand (White Water's Ridge: Afrikaans) and the city's
northern and western suburbs have undulating hills, while the eastern metro
area is generally flat. The city enjoys a dry, sunny climate with the exception
of occasional late afternoon downpours in the summer months of October to
April. Temperatures in Johannesburg are usually fairly mild thanks to the
city's high altitude, with the average maximum daytime temperature in January
of 26�C, dropping to an average maximum of around 16�C in June. During the
winter, the temperature occasionally drops to below freezing at nightime,
causing frost. Snow is a rare occurrence, although the city experienced
snowfall in September 1982 and light snow in August 2006). The annual average
rainfall is 713mm, which is mostly concentrated in the summer months. Despite
the relatively dry climate, Johannesburg contains about six million trees, and
it is often claimed that the city has the largest man-made forest in the world.
Many trees were originally planted in the northern areas of the city at the end
of the 19th century, to provide wood for the mining industry. The areas were
developed by a German immigrant, who called the forest estates Sachsenwald. The
name was changed to Saxonwold, now the name of a suburb, during World War I.
White residents who moved into the areas, now generally referred to as the
Northern Suburbs, retained many of the original trees and planted new ones,
with the encouragement of successive city councils. In recent years, however, a
considerable number of trees have been felled, to make way for the Northern
Suburbs' speedy residential and commercial redevelopment. The city is therefore
at risk of losing its forest coverage within a few decades.
Johannesburg Demographics
Geographical distribution of home languages in Johannesburg.According to the
2001 South African National Census, the population of Johannesburg is 3,225,812
people, though including the East Rand and other suburban areas it's around 7
million, who live in 1,006,930 formal households, of which 86 % have a flush or
chemical toilet, and 91 % have refuse removed by the municipality at least once
a week. 86 % of households have access to running water, and 80 % use
electricity as the main source of energy. 22 % of Johannesburg residents stay
in informal dwellings. 65 % of households are headed by one person. Black
Africans account for 73 % of the population, followed by whites at 16 %,
Coloured South Africans at 6 % and Asians at 4 %. 42 % of the population is
under the age of 24, while 6 % of the population is over 60 years old. 37 % of
city residents are unemployed. 91 % of the unemployed are black. Women comprise
43 % of the working population. 19 % of economically active adults work in
wholesale and retail sectors, 18 % in financial, real estate and business
services, 17 % in community, social and personal services and 12 % are in
manufacturing. Only 0.7 % work in mining. 34 % of Johannesburg residents speak
Nguni languages at home, 26 % speak Sotho languages, 19 % speak English, and 8
% speak Afrikaans. 29 % of adults have graduated from high school. 14 % have
higher education (University or Technical school). 7 % of residents are
completely illiterate. 15 % have primary education. 34 % use public
transportation to commute to work or school. 32 % walk to work or school. 34 %
use private transportation to travel to work or school. 53 % belong to
mainstream Christian churches. 24 % are atheist. 14 % are members of African
Independent Churches. 3 % are Muslim. 1 % are Jewish. 1 % are Hindu.
Johannesburg Economy
The skyline of Johannesburg's Central Business District as seen from the
observatory of the Carlton Centre.Johannesburg is the economic and financial
hub of South Africa, producing 16 % of South Africa's gross domestic product,
and accounts for 40 % of Gauteng's economic activity. Mining is the foundation
of the Witwatersrand's economy, but its importance is gradually declining.
While gold mining no longer takes place within the city limits, most mining
companies have their headquarters in Johannesburg. The city has a great variety
of manufacturing industries, including steel and cement plants. Many banking
and commercial companies are also located in Johannesburg. Johannesburg has
Africa's largest stock exchange, the JSE Securities Exchange. Due to its
commercial importance, this city is the site of a number of government branch
offices, as well as consular offices and other institutions that are usually
found only in capital cities. There is also a very large informal economy
consisting of cash-only street traders and vendors which are largely missed in
official statistics. The Witwatersrand urban complex is a major consumer of
water in a dry region. Its continued economic and population growth has
depended on schemes to divert water from other regions of South Africa and from
the highlands of Lesotho, but additional sources will be needed early in the
21st century. The container terminal at City Deep is purported to be the
largest "dry port" in the world, with some 60 % of cargo that arrives through
the port of Durban arriving in Johannesburg. The City Deep area has been
declared an IDZ (industrial development zone) by the Gauteng government, as
part of the Blue IQ Project. Johannesburg's largest and most prestigious
shopping centres are Sandton City and Hyde Park respectively. Other centres
include Rosebank, Eastgate, Westgate, Northgate, Southgate, and Cresta. There
are also plans to build an extremely large shopping centre, known as the
Zonk'Izizwe Shopping Resort, in Midrand. "Zonk'Izizwe" means "All Nations" in
isiZulu, indicating that the centre will cater to the city's diverse mix of
peoples and races.
Communications and media in Johannesburg
Several newspapers and magazines have their offices in the city, as it is the
transport and telecommunications centre for the country. Beeld is the leading
Afrikaans newspaper for the city and the country, while the City Press is a
Sunday newspaper that is the third largest selling newspaper in South Africa.
The Sowetan is a major newspaper that is published in Soweto township. The Mail
& Guardian is an investigative newspaper while The Citizen is a
tabloid-style paper, and The Star is a local newspaper that mostly covers
Gauteng-related issues. The Sunday Times is the most widely read Sunday
newspaper. Johannesburg is also a centre for broadcast media, with such radio
stations as YFM, Metro FM, 702, Highveld Stereo, 5FM, Kaya FM and Classic FM
situated in the city. Johannesburg is also the headquarters of broadcasters
South African Broadcasting Corporation and M-Net, while eTV also has a presence
in the city. The city has two television towers, the Hillbrow Tower and the
Sentech Tower.
Suburbs in Johannesburg
The different suburbs of Johannesburg are generally categorised by compass
direction, as different areas of the city have greatly different personalities.
Since Johannesburg is such a large city, there is great variety in the suburbs
that comprise it. While the Central Business District and the surrounding areas
were formerly highly desired wealthy areas, they have lost their former
reputation after migrants took over abandoned buildings, and the crime level
rose accordingly. The suburbs to the south of the city are mainly lower-class
residential suburbs along with some townships, although most suburbs in the
South tend to be extremely large and undistinguished. The northern and
northwestern suburbs have become the centre for the wealthy, containing the
high-end retail shops and well as several upper-class residential areas
including Houghton, where Nelson Mandela makes his home. The northwestern area
in particular is vibrant and lively, with the mostly-black suburb of Sophiatown
a hotbed of political activity and the Bohemian-flavoured Melville featuring
lively gathering places and nightlife. Auckland Park is home to the
headquarters of the South African Broadcasting Corporation and the University
of Johannesburg. To the southwest of the City Centre is Soweto, a mostly black
urban area constructed during the apartheid regime specifically for housing
African people who were then living in areas designated by the government for
white settlement. Today, Soweto is among the poorest parts of Johannesburg. The
eastern suburbs include Yeoville, a hot spot for black nightlife despite its
otherwise poor reputation, and several residential areas that are slowly
gaining respectability.
Joannesburg and Tourism
Johannesburg has not traditionally been known as a tourist destination, but the
city is a transit point for connecting flights to Cape Town, Durban, and the
Kruger National Park. Consequently, most international visitors to South Africa
pass through Johannesburg at least once, which has led to the development of
more attractions for tourists. Recent additions have centred around history
museums, such as the Apartheid Museum and the Hector Pieterson Museum. Gold
Reef City, a large amusement park to the south of the Central Business
District, is also a large draw for tourists in the city. The Johannesburg Zoo
is also one of the largest in South Africa. The city also has several art
museums, such as the Johannesburg Art Gallery, which featured South African and
European landscape and figurative paintings. The Museum Africa covers the
history of the city of Johannesburg, as well as housing a large collection of
rock art. The Market Theatre complex attained notoriety in the 1970s and 1980s
by staging anti-apartheid plays, and has now become a centre for modern South
African playwriting. There is also a large industry around visiting former
townships, such as Soweto and Alexandra. Most visitors to Soweto go to see the
Mandela Museum, which is located in the former home of Nelson Mandela. The
Cradle of Humankind UNESCO World Heritage Site is 25 kilometres to the
northwest of the city. The Sterkfontein fossil site is famous for being the
world's richest hominid site and produced the first adult Australopithecus
africanus and the first near-complete skeleton of an early
Australopithecine.
Sports teams and stadiums in Johannesburg
Ellis Park Stadium, the host of the 1995 Rugby World Cup.Club Sport League
Stadium Kaizer Chiefs Football Premier Soccer League Johannesburg Stadium
Moroka Swallows Football Premier Soccer League Rand Stadium Orlando Pirates
Football Premier Soccer League FNB Stadium Alexander United Football MTN
Supersport Leagues Alexander Stadium Katlehong City Football MTN Supersport
Leagues Potgietersrus Rugby Stadium Highveld Lions Cricket Standard Bank Cup
Series Wanderers Stadium Lions Rugby Super 14 Ellis Park Stadium Golden Lions
Rugby Currie Cup Ellis Park Stadium Johannesburg�s most popular sports by
participation are football, running, rugby, and cricket. The Lions, formerly
the Cats, represent Johannesburg, North West and Mpumalanga in the Southern
Hemisphere's Super 14 Rugby Competition, which includes teams from South
Africa, Australia, and New Zealand. Johannesburg is also the home of the Golden
Lions, who play at Ellis Park Stadium and compete in the Currie Cup. Early each
Sunday morning, tens of thousands of runners gather to take part in informal
runs organised by several athletic clubs. People from Johannesburg are football
mad and clubs from Johannesburg either play in the Premier Soccer League (PSL)
or the First Division. In the PSL, the top Johannesburg teams are all fierce
rivals and include Kaizer Chiefs (also known as the Amakhosi), Orlando Pirates
(also known as the Buccaneers) and Moroka Swallows, based at the city's
Johannesburg, Rand, and FNB stadiums respectively. Witwatersrand University,
nicknamed the Clever Boys, who have a player membership of over 1,500, one of
the world's largest are also part of the premier league. First Division teams
include Katlehong City and Alexander United, who play at Alexander and Reiger
Park stadiums respectively In cricket, the Highveld Lions represent
Johannesburg, the rest of Gauteng as well as the North West Province at the
Wanderers Stadium. They take part in the Supersport and MTN Domestic
Championship. Johannesburg will also be the location of several matches in the
2010 FIFA World Cup, which is to be held in South Africa.
Transport in Johannesburg
The M2 in the afternoon as it passes through the Central Business District.
Beyers Naud� Drive, one of Johannesburg's main arterial avenues, in Fourways. A
full minibus taxi. A board on the M1 indicating the exit for Johannesburg. The
M1 is one of the busiest highways in Johannesburg. A rainy drive on the
N1.Johannesburg, much like Los Angeles, is a young and sprawling city geared
towards private motorists, and lacks a convenient public transportation system.
A significant number of the city's residents are dependent on the city's
informal minibus taxis. Mass transit Johannesburg's metro railway system
connects central Johannesburg to Soweto, Pretoria, and most of the satellite
towns along the Witwatersrand. The railways transport huge numbers of workers
every day. However, the railway infrastructure was built in Johannesburg's
infancy and covers only the older areas in the city's south. In the past half
century Johannesburg has grown largely northwards, and none of the northern
areas, including the key business districts of Sandton, Midrand, Randburg, and
Rosebank, have any rail infrastructure. The Gauteng Provincial Government's
Blue IQ Project, Gautrain, however, has made provisions for the creation of a
rapid rail link, running north to south, between Johannesburg and Pretoria, and
east-west between Sandton and Johannesburg International Airport. Slated to be
ready in time for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, the rail system is being designed to
alleviate traffic on the N1 freeway between Johannesburg and Pretoria, which
records vehicle loads of up to 160,000 per day. Airports Johannesburg is served
by OR Tambo International Airport (formerly Johannesburg International Airport)
for both domestic and international flights. Other airports include Rand
Airport, Grand Central Airport, and Lanseria. Rand Airport, located in
Germiston, is a small airfield used mostly for private aircraft and the home of
South African Airways's first Boeing 747 Classic, the Lebombo, which is now an
aviation museum. Grand Central is located in Midrand and also caters to small,
private aircraft. Lanseria Airport is used for commercial flights to Cape Town,
Botswana, and Sun City. Buses Johannesburg is served by a bus fleet operated by
Metrobus, a corporate unit of the City of Johannesburg. It has a fleet
consisting of approximately 550 single and double-decker buses, plying 84
different routes in the city. This total includes 200 modern buses (150
double-deckers and 50 single-deckers), made by Volvo and Marcopolo/Brasa in
2002. Metrobus' fleet carries approximately 20 million passengers per annum.
Metrobus also operates a number of open-top buses in the "City Slicker" role,
using them to provide guided tours around the city. In addition there are a
number of private bus operators, though most focus on the inter-city routes, or
on bus charters for touring groups. Taxis Johannesburg has two kinds of taxis,
metered taxis and minibus taxis. Unlike many cities, metered taxis are not
allowed to drive around the city looking for passengers and instead must be
called and ordered to a destination. Metered taxis are rare, in comparison to
many other cities. The minibus "taxis" are the de facto standard and essential
form of transport for the majority of the population. Although essential, these
taxis are often of a poor standard in not only road-worthiness, but also in
terms of driver quality with a majority of taxi drivers breaking traffic laws
regularly (such as driving in the emergency lane while speeding on a highway).
With the high demand for transport by the working class of South Africa,
minibus taxis are often over-filled with passengers causing yet another hazard
for road users. However, without subsidies from Government and a lack of other
feasible public transport, minibus taxis will remain an essential form of
transport for many of Joburg's working class. Freeways Main article:
Johannesburg freeways The fact that Johannesburg is not built near a large
navigable body of water has meant that from the very beginning of the city's
history, ground transportation has been the most important method of
transporting people and goods in and out of the city. One of Africa's most
famous "beltways" or ring roads/orbitals is the Johannesburg Ring Road. The
road is comprised of three freeways that converge on the city, forming an
80-kilometre loop around it: the N3 Eastern Bypass, which links Johannesburg
with Durban; the N1 Western Bypass, which links Johannesburg with Pretoria and
Cape Town; and the N12 Southern Bypass, which links Johannesburg with Witbank
and Kimberley. The N3 was built exclusively with asphalt, while the N12 and N1
sections were made with concrete, hence the nickname given to the N1 Western
Bypass, "The Concrete Highway". In spite of being up to 12 lanes wide in some
areas (6 lanes in either direction), the Johannesburg Ring Road is frequently
clogged with traffic. The Gillooly's Interchange, built on an old farm and the
point at which the N3 Eastern Bypass and the R24 Airport Freeway intersect, is
purported to be the busiest interchange in the Southern Hemisphere. Trains
Construction of the Gautrain Rapid Rail started construction in October 2006
and will be completed by 2010, in time for the FIFA World Cup. It will comprise
of number of underground stations (in the built up areas) as well as above
ground. It will run from Johannesburg's Park Station, through Rosebank,
Sandton, Midrand and into Pretoria. There will also be a line from the OR Tambo
International Airport traveling to Sandton. This will be the first new rail way
that has been laid in South Africa since 1977.
Universities in Johannesburg
Johannesburg has a well-developed higher education system of both private and
public universities. Johannesburg is served by the public universities
University of the Witwatersrand and the University of Johannesburg. University
of Johannesburg was formed on 1 January 2005 when three separate universities
and campuses�Rand Afrikaans University, Technikon Witwatersrand, and Vista
University�were merged together. The new university offers education primarily
in English and Afrikaans, although courses may be taken in any of South
Africa's official languages. The University of the Witwatersrand is one of the
leading universities in South Africa, and is famous as a centre of resistance
to apartheid, earning it the nickname "Moscow on the Hill". Private
universities include Monash University, which has one of its eight campuses in
Johannesburg (six of the other campuses are in Australia, while the eighth is
in Malaysia), and Midrand Graduate Institute which is located in Midrand.
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