Saturday Star

Ponte: once a pariah, now a paradise

There are plenty of house rules, but life in Joburg’s tallest residentia­l building is quiet and peaceful

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PONTE, the tallest residentia­l building in Joburg and probably Africa, is full at last, perhaps because it is run a little like a military camp.

But this camp is loved by its residents who wouldn’t want to live anywhere else.

One resident told me: “It’s nice here, it’s safe and quiet and secure.”

He has lived on the 48th floor for five years and with arms flailing in all directions to express his enthusiasm, he said: “You’ll love it, you should move here.” This cylindrica­l building that perhaps best encapsulat­es the dreamers we Joburgers are, stands on the rocky edge of Hillbrow and is home to 3 500 people, 500 of whom are children.

Residents include lawyers, journalist­s, students, doctors and business people.

With 484 apartments, it defines the Joburg skyline, together with the Hillbrow tower. Soaring 173m and 54 floors into the sky, it was designed in the New Brutalism style, using “hacked concrete” to line the outer walls. It has seen several reincarnat­ions over the past dozen years but now the owners must be pleased that it is full, and with a waiting list.

I went to visit Dlala Nje, a refuge for children in the building and the surroundin­g suburbs of Yeoville and Berea.

Dlala Nje means “just play” and it seems a good name for kids living in all that hacked concrete. Founded in 2012 by Michal Luptak and journalist Nicholas Bauer, who live in two of the apartments on the 52nd floor, it is billed as a kids’ emporium, where they have their own space to play computer games, select a book out of a small library, play football and arcade games, obtain homework help, have access to the internet, get up on the stage and perform, or just hang out.

“Ponte isn’t really a place where kids can be kids. Except at Dlala Nje,” notes the website. I spoke to some of them.

A bunch of young teen girls were smiling and chatting in a corner, happy to tell me how they enjoy coming to the centre, some even from 3km away.

Godfrey Tshivhase, 25, runs the centre. He has an IT diploma and hails from Limpopo. Tall and bearded, with a hat perched jauntily on his head, he stands close to the boys at a desk of laptops, helping them to navigate their way around the internet.

He used to live in the building, running a business fixing people’s computers, but was forced out because he offered competitio­n to the IT shop on the ground floor. But his heart obviously belongs to Ponte. He lives in the block of flats next door and he is passionate about the children and Dlala Nje.

“I come with something to make it better,” he says. At least 60 kids aged 4 to 18 attend the centre. “We take kids out of bad things out there. They are very comfortabl­e to come here.” He says he and the kids are getting to know each another and create a community.

A foundation has been set up. Luptak says: “We have set up a Dlala Nje Foundation with a purpose of quantifyin­g the impact that we make in our communitie­s. Until today, we merely provide an exposure platform for kids to be kids with activities that stimulate young minds.”

The idea is to “create a developmen­t centre for youth in our area and the greater CBD, to ultimately provide opportunit­ies through education, infinite curiosity and fun”.

And to fund the project, Luptak and Bauer do tours of Hillbrow, where locals and visitors can immerse themselves in what many might consider a war zone.

The idea is to break down the horror stories of the suburb, take people out their comfort zones, and get them to taste life on the other side for a few hours. It starts with a tour of Ponte, from standing on the rocky foundation of the building and looking up 54 floors to the sky, then taking in another spectacula­r view from the top of the building. The tour ends with a drink in a Hillbrow tavern.

Back at Ponte, Ria Breedt, the office manager, who lives in the building with her manager husband, Jaap, says: “There are strict rules and regulation­s – if they don’t like it, they can move out.” After 10pm, no noise is permitted in the building. She conducts a monthly inspection of flats. “They never know when we’re coming.”

With a thumbprint security system, residents can have visitors for one night only, and that person has to leave their ID.

Called Gogo by residents, she says Ponte is “a happy place with a quiet, peaceful atmosphere”. She says there has been a big change in Hillbrow. The police are more active in the area and the nearby buildings have been renovated. When she and her husband took over in 2009, there were only 79 flats occupied.

They spruced up the flats. The penthouses were refashione­d into single-level living spaces, creating 14 more flats. Rentals are more than reasonable: ranging from R2 500 for a bachelor pad to R5 600 for a threebed, two-bathroom penthouse, excluding utilities.

A few years before, it was being reshaped as Ponte City, where Joburgers were invited to buy flats with the slogan: “Live your life.”

In an ambitious project by two developers, Nour Addine Ayyoub and David Selvan, who had purportedl­y bought the buidling, potential buyers could snap up a furnished flat in six styles: glam rock, future slick, Moroccan delight, global fusion, Zen-like and old money.

The 32nd floor was renovated in these styles, and the show day attracted 300 people, with 80 percent of the flats sold on the day. Supposedly R100 million was being pumped into the reinventio­n, with flats going from R400 000 to R938 000.

The developers had moved quickly – in a short time they managed to relocate the tenants to nearby buildings, clearing 12 floors, with another seven floors vacated by the end of November that year.

But the scheme vanished as quickly as the flashing red Vodacom ad on the top of the building vanishes into the night. The developers hadn’t actually bought the building and the plans came to nought.

But this wasn’t the lowest point in Ponte’s 40-year history. It opened in 1975 as one of the most desirable places to live in the city, described by newspapers as “heaven on earth”.

Its six penthouse apartments were on three levels, with a sauna, bar and rooftop braai area. But by the late 1980s and through the 90s its fortunes had tumbled, with drug lords and criminals making it home until it reached its lowest point in 1998 when the ANC Youth League suggested it be turned into a prison – an idea quickly discarded. Now, at 40, Ponte has found itself. It’s a home for kids, it’s a home for immigrants, it’s a home for locals. It’s a home for “hipsters, other scribes, jocks, philanthro­pic types and other curiositie­s from the middle class”. In Bauer’s words, “it’s the place to be.”

We provide a platform for kids to be kids and stimulate minds

 ??  ?? LANDMARK: The 54-storey Ponte Tower building is visible from almost anywhere in Joburg.
LANDMARK: The 54-storey Ponte Tower building is visible from almost anywhere in Joburg.
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 ?? PICTURES: MOTSHWARI MOFOKENG ?? CHILD’S PLAY: Children have fun after school every day at the Dlala Nje children’s centre, games and cultural emporium at the base of Ponte City in the heart of Hillbrow.
PICTURES: MOTSHWARI MOFOKENG CHILD’S PLAY: Children have fun after school every day at the Dlala Nje children’s centre, games and cultural emporium at the base of Ponte City in the heart of Hillbrow.
 ??  ?? PLAYING THE GAME: Young people come to the centre from all around Hillbrow, even up to 3km away.
PLAYING THE GAME: Young people come to the centre from all around Hillbrow, even up to 3km away.
 ??  ?? COMMUNITY AT HEART: The Dlala Nje children’s centre offers homework help, a library and internet access.
COMMUNITY AT HEART: The Dlala Nje children’s centre offers homework help, a library and internet access.
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