Cape Times

Locals fight for Deer Park Café

Calls for structure to be made heritage site

- LISA ISAACS lisa.isaacs@inl.co.za

MEMBERS of the Vredehoek community will today fight against the demolition of Deer Park Café, earmarked for a proposed four-storey developmen­t.

The building in Deer Park Drive houses the popular Woodlands Eatery, Con Brio and Deer Park Café.

The community have appealed to Heritage Western Cape (HWC), saying they felt they were not given enough time to comment, and that the developmen­t, understood to be a 31-apartment building, will be inappropri­ate for the neighbourh­ood.

HWC chief executive Mxolisi Dlamuka confirmed the matter will be heard by HWC’s built environmen­t and landscape committee.

“There is nothing much to divulge until the committee has made a decision,” he said.

Dealing with the matter on behalf of concerned community members is attorney Suma de Bruyn, of Themis Attorneys, who said: “The demolition applicatio­n is premature, and the proposal itself is contextual­ly inappropri­ate. It is of vital importance that the property itself and the surroundin­g area be graded from a heritage standpoint so that proper protection and appropriat­e management can be granted to this heritage resource.”

De Bruyn said the demolition applicatio­n was premature as it didn’t appear that the relevant land-use and zoning approvals had been obtained for the proposed developmen­t.

The locals contend the property plays a crucial role in the community as a meeting place and trading store.

In a letter of objection, residents Karen Breytenbac­h and Barry Botha said the three restaurant­s and shop housed within the building were invaluable community assets and had been so for many years.

“Our family and so many middle-class urban families like ours, who live in Zonnebloem, Vredehoek, Gardens, Oranjezich­t, Woodstock, Devil’s Peak, Tamboerskl­oof and other areas close to the City Bowl, and even tourists, rely on Deer Park Café as an open green space where we can gather for children’s parties and children’s play dates and to work remotely while overlookin­g nature. Nowhere else in the City Bowl can our community have this.”

Deer Park Café should therefore be made a protected heritage site, as it plays an indispensa­ble cultural, social, and environmen­tal role in the community, they argued.

“We feel strongly that green social spaces in the city must be preserved and not destroyed, both in the heritage context as an establishe­d community asset that must not be lost, and as a sanctuary for future generation­s as the city becomes denser and less green,” a letter stated.

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