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Waterkloof
View on WikipediaWaterkloof (Afrikaans for "Water Ravine") is an affluent suburb of the city of Pretoria in the Gauteng province of South Africa, located to the east of the city centre. It is named after the original farm that stood there when Pretoria was founded in the 19th Century.
Key Information
Waterkloof is a highly sought-after area and has some of the city's most expensive real estate, including hilltop homesteads on Edward and Victoria Streets with views of Pretoria. Like many areas of the city, its streets are lined with jacaranda trees. Many streets are named after British royalty; the main thoroughfares are Crown Avenue, which links Waterkloof with the affluent suburb of Brooklyn to its north, and Albert Street, which runs east–west between the neighbouring areas of Menlo Park and Groenkloof.
Several ambassadorial residences are located in Waterkloof. It is the home of soprano Mimi Coertse, and the location of the upmarket Dube-house in the film Tsotsi. Pretoria Country Club, which has an eighteen-hole golf course, is also located in the area.
Demographics
[edit]According to the South African National Census of 2001, 38.6% spoke Afrikaans, 37.5% English, 4.9% Tswana, 4.8% Northern Sotho, 3.1% Sotho, 2.0% Zulu, 1.9% Southern Ndebele, 1.2% Tsonga, 0.7% Xhosa, 0.5% Venda, 0.4% Swazi and 4.5% some other language as their first language.
| Ethnic group | 2001 population | 2001 (%) | 2011 population | 2011 (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| White | 2,892 | 76.0% | 3,455 | 71.68% |
| Black African | 829 | 21.8% | 1,066 | 22.12% |
| Indian or Asian | 53 | 1.4% | 120 | 2.49% |
| Coloured | 27 | 0.7% | 48 | 1% |
| Other | 4 | 0.1% | 131 | 2.72% |
| Total | 3,805 | 100% | 4,820 | 100% |
See also
[edit]- AFB Waterkloof, an air force base located in Centurion, Gauteng about 5 km south of Waterkloof.
- Hoërskool Waterkloof, large Afrikaans high school situated about 8 km south of Waterkloof between Erasmuskloof and Elardus Park.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "Sub Place Waterkloof". Census 2011.
Waterkloof
View on GrokipediaGeography and Environment
Location and Topography
Waterkloof is a suburb in the eastern part of Pretoria, within the City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality, Gauteng Province, South Africa, situated approximately 6 km east of the city's central business district.[10] Its geographic coordinates center around 25°46′41″S 28°14′9″E.[11] The suburb occupies the Waterkloof Ridge, featuring undulating hilly terrain typical of the Highveld plateau, with elevations averaging 1,440 meters above sea level.[12] This topography includes natural ravines and streams, reflected in the area's Afrikaans-derived name meaning "water ravine," and supports hilltop elevations offering views over Pretoria.[13][14] The ridge setting contributes to varied slopes, with the suburb tapering downward from higher points.[15]Climate and Natural Features
Waterkloof features a subtropical highland climate with hot, rainy summers and mild, dry winters. Average annual temperatures range from lows of about 5°C in winter to highs of 30°C in summer, with a yearly mean of 18.4°C. Precipitation totals approximately 661 mm annually, concentrated in the summer months from October to March, when thunderstorms are common; January typically receives the highest rainfall at around 135 mm, while July is the driest with less than 3 mm.[16][17][18] The suburb's topography is defined by its elevated position on the Waterkloof Ridge, part of Pretoria's undulating Highveld landscape at altitudes exceeding 1,400 meters, offering expansive views over the city. The name "Waterkloof," meaning "water ravine" in Afrikaans, derives from natural drainage features including streams like the Waterkloof Spruit that carve through the rocky terrain. Remaining natural vegetation includes patches of grassland typical of the region, interspersed with urban gardens, though much of the area has been developed with limited preserved indigenous flora.[19][20]History
Establishment and Early Development (Pre-1948)
Waterkloof originated as a farmstead in the mid-19th century, predating the founding of Pretoria in 1855 by Marthinus Wessels Pretorius, who purchased nearby farms to establish the city as the capital of the South African Republic.[21][22] The name "Waterkloof," translating from Afrikaans as "water ravine," reflected the local topography of a deep valley traversed by streams, which supported early agricultural use on the expansive farm.[22][1] Portions of the farm, such as Waterkloof No. 4, were acquired by figures including President S.J.P. Kruger during the late 19th century, leveraging his influence in land grants within the Transvaal.[23] Suburban development commenced in 1903 when Waterkloof was proclaimed a township, transforming the remote, 10-kilometer-southeast extension of Pretoria into a planned residential area amid its isolation from the city center.[24][25] This establishment, alongside suburbs like Pretoria Gardens and Rietondale, aligned with post-Anglo-Boer War urban expansion under British administration, emphasizing orderly land subdivision for white settlers.[25] The South African Railways and Harbours constructed a branch line to facilitate access, underscoring the logistical challenges of developing the site's undulating terrain.[1] By the 1910s, the Pretoria Townships Limited advanced the suburb's layout through systematic plotting of stands and promotional efforts, as documented in contemporary descriptions portraying Waterkloof as an emerging high-class enclave with scenic prospects.[26] The founding of the Pretoria Country Club in 1910 further catalyzed growth, drawing affluent professionals and officials who valued the area's large erven—often exceeding one hectare—for spacious homes and gardens.[27] Initial infrastructure included basic roads and water supply from nearby sources, though full electrification and sewage systems lagged until the 1920s, reflecting gradual investment in what became Pretoria's premier leafy suburb.[24] Through the interwar years, Waterkloof's population grew modestly, appealing to the white middle and upper classes seeking respite from urban density, with property values rising due to its elevation offering views over the southern ridges.[1] Early residents included civil servants and mining executives, supported by proximity to government institutions post-Union of South Africa in 1910, though the suburb retained a semi-rural character until accelerated building in the 1930s.[24] No major industries developed, preserving its residential focus amid Pretoria's expansion.[25]Role During Apartheid Era (1948–1994)
Waterkloof, as a designated white Group Area under apartheid legislation such as the Group Areas Act of 1950, remained an exclusively residential enclave for affluent white South Africans, exemplifying the spatial segregation that confined non-whites to peripheral townships.[28] The suburb's large, leafy properties and elevated topography made it particularly appealing to the white elite, including high-ranking National Party officials and Afrikaner nationalists who administered the regime's policies.[22] [10] This demographic homogeneity reinforced apartheid's racial hierarchy, with residents benefiting from superior municipal services, schools, and infrastructure unavailable in black areas, thereby sustaining the system's economic and social privileges for whites.[29] The presence of Air Force Base Waterkloof, located within the suburb's broader area, amplified its strategic significance to the apartheid state. Established as a key South African Air Force hub south of Pretoria, the base facilitated military logistics, including troop transports and aircraft operations critical to the regime's "total national strategy" against internal dissent and external threats.[30] [6] During the South African Border War (1966–1989), it supported SAAF deployments to Namibia and Angola, where forces countered SWAPO and Cuban-backed incursions, while domestically aiding counter-insurgency efforts against the ANC and other liberation movements.[31] The base's role underscored Waterkloof's contribution to the militarized enforcement of apartheid, housing personnel who operationalized the state's defense apparatus amid escalating conflicts through the 1980s. No major uprisings or forced removals occurred within Waterkloof itself, unlike in forced relocation sites such as nearby Crossroads, preserving its stability as a secure retreat for regime supporters.[28] By 1990, as sanctions and internal pressures mounted, the suburb's insulated prosperity highlighted the disparities that fueled anti-apartheid resistance, though it faced no direct violence during the era's transition.[29]Post-Apartheid Evolution (1994–Present)
Following the democratic transition in 1994, Waterkloof retained its status as one of Pretoria's most exclusive residential suburbs, characterized by spacious low-density housing, tree-lined streets, and proximity to key institutions such as Air Force Base Waterkloof, which continued to operate as a major South African Air Force facility hosting international dignitaries and events. The suburb's affluence, driven by high entry barriers including elevated property values, limited large-scale racial integration despite the abolition of apartheid-era residential restrictions, resulting in persistent socioeconomic homogeneity.[3] National trends of rising violent crime post-1994 prompted residents to invest in private security measures, including neighborhood patrols and gated estates, though court rulings such as the 2005 Pretoria High Court decision rejected proposals to fully restrict street access in areas like Waterkloof Ridge, preserving public roads while enhancing surveillance.[32][33] Demographic shifts occurred gradually, with the 2011 census recording a population of 4,820, of which 72% identified as white and 22% as Black African, reflecting modest diversification among the emerging Black middle class amid broader South African urbanization, though economic factors constrained further change.[34] Property values appreciated steadily, with average prices rising over 35% from 2009 to 2019 and sales favoring larger homes, underscoring demand from professionals and diplomats drawn to the area's prestige and views of the Magaliesberg mountains.[35] Residents' associations, such as the Waterkloof Homeowners Association, emerged or intensified efforts to maintain infrastructure, advocate for service delivery, and address municipal shortcomings in the City of Tshwane, focusing on issues like water supply and road maintenance without altering the suburb's upscale profile.[36] In recent decades, Waterkloof has seen infill developments and a shift toward younger buyers, including families seeking modern amenities, while sustaining its appeal to high-net-worth individuals through top-tier security and limited commercial intrusion.[37] This evolution aligns with Pretoria's post-apartheid growth as an administrative hub, where affluent enclaves like Waterkloof buffered against national challenges such as infrastructure decay and inequality, prioritizing private governance over state-led redistribution.[38]Demographics
Population Composition and Trends
As of the 2011 South African census, the population of Waterkloof sub place stood at 4,820 residents across 2,018 households, yielding an average household size of approximately 2.4 persons and a density of 1,291 persons per square kilometer.[34] The suburb exhibited a slight female majority, with 52.78% of residents identifying as female (2,544 individuals) and 47.22% as male (2,276 individuals).[34] Racial composition reflected Waterkloof's status as a historically white suburb, though with post-apartheid diversification evident in the inclusion of non-white groups previously barred by legislation. Whites comprised the majority at 71.68% (3,455 persons), followed by Black Africans at 22.12% (1,066 persons); the remaining groups were Indian or Asian (2.49%, 120 persons), Other (2.72%, 131 persons), and Coloured (1.00%, 48 persons).[34]| Population Group | Number | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| White | 3,455 | 71.68% |
| Black African | 1,066 | 22.12% |
| Other | 131 | 2.72% |
| Indian or Asian | 120 | 2.49% |
| Coloured | 48 | 1.00% |
