The Outpost

Negative image blights landmark Johannesburg skyscraper’s rebirth

A general view of Ponte City, also known as Ponte Tower, in Berea, Johannesburg on April 21, 2023. - The brutalist-styled building was completed in 1975. At 173 metres high, it was the tallest residential building in Africa. Initially a sought-after location, for its allure and location, the tower fell into disrepair as a once thriving central business district was deserted by big corporates, due initially to sanctions slapped against the apartheid regime. In the 1980s and 1990s the grey concrete tower became a haven of violent gangs, and a hub for drug trafficking and prostitution. A decade-and-half ago, the building got a facelift in the run up the 2010 FIFA World Cup. (Photo by EMMANUEL CROSET / AFP)

The view of Johannesburg from the Ponte City skyscraper is breathtaking, but the tower is struggling to shrug off its reputation as a symbol of a dilapidated inner city.

At 173 metres (568 feet) high, the brutalist-styled cylindrical building completed in 1975 was the tallest residential building in Africa and a sought-after location.

A decade-and-half ago, the building got a facelift in the run up the 2010 FIFA World Cup. (Photo by EMMANUEL CROSET / AFP)

But the tower fell into disrepair as a once thriving central business district was deserted by big corporates, initially due to sanctions slapped against South Africa’s apartheid regime.

In the 1980s and 1990s the grey concrete tower became a haven of violent gangs and a hub for drug trafficking and prostitution.

A general view of Ponte City, also known as Ponte Tower, atrium in Berea, Johannesburg on April 19, 2023. (Photo by EMMANUEL CROSET / AFP)

The tower’s windows were sealed off to prevent people from tossing their trash into the shared yard during the years when there were no garbage bins in the area.

The building got a facelift in the run-up to the 2010 FIFA World Cup and squatters were evicted.

Today, small middle-class families live there, paying between $190 and $450 a month for their homes.

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Polite Ngwenya (L) and his daughter look out the window of their rented apartment at Ponte City, also known as Ponte Tower, in Berea, Johannesburg on April 19, 2023. (Photo by EMMANUEL CROSET / AFP)

From his window, music teacher Polite Ngwenya, 33, can look out on the metropolis of one of the world’s most unequal countries.

“People in the neighbourhood don’t realise how lucky we are,” he told AFP. “Security here is on point, the building is clean and the towering views are great, unique.”

Sifiso Zikhali, Dladla Nje tour operator, gestures out of the window of an apartment on the 54th floor at Ponte City, also known as Ponte Tower, in Berea, Johannesburg on April 19, 2023. (Photo by EMMANUEL CROSET / AFP)

Inside, the tower’s hollow core offers a dizzying view of the courtyard and plenty of light to the apartments.

The ramp entrance to the building opens onto a vast and empty underground parking lot, where the shells of a few disused vehicles languish.

A vehicle’s exterior body is seen in the parking lot of Ponte City, also known as Ponte Tower, in Berea, Johannesburg on June 8, 2023. (Photo by EMMANUEL CROSET / AFP)

Access into the building guarded by security is through metal turnstiles and ID has to be shown.

Sifiso Zikhali, Dladla Nje tour operator is seen in the livingroom of an apartment on the 54th floor at Ponte City, also known as Ponte Tower, in Berea, Johannesburg on April 19, 2023. (Photo by EMMANUEL CROSET / AFP)

But in a neighbourhood that remains rundown and one of the city’s roughest, Uber drivers are nervous about going to Ponte City, especially at night.

The surrounding streets are poorly lit and littered with rubbish.

Inner-city foundation Dlala Nje — Zulu for “Let’s have fun!” — wants to change the negative perceptions about the area.

For the past decade it has been offering walking tours of the neighbourhood, culminating at the tower, which has become a tourist attraction.

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“We have a long way to go” to change the prejudices against the building, said Ngwenya.

© Agence France-Presse

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