Architect and Builder April/May 2019 | Page 13

the quality of light and ventilation inside. The residential units will include a wide range of apartments, from micro-studios to family- size two-bedroom flats, encouraging not just economic diversity, but also social diversity. The new residential building will adopt a similar approach in its unit mix over 11 storeys overlooking the Johannesburg skyline. The industrial heritage of the buildings will be honoured not just through the lightness of the architectural interventions to the façades and by exposing the expressive minimalism of their industrial materiality – off-shutter concrete, brickwork and steel – but also through the naming of each building, which includes refence to their former incarnations as a centre of the diamond and gold trade, but reframed as more inclusive and representative of South Africa’s broader history. Urban Design The Jewel City complex will be reintegrated with the existing urban fabric, but will be orientated inwards to create and sustain a new pedestrianised section of Fox Street as its central axis. This urban intervention will help to support a safe, friendly and open pedestrian- focused public environment and urban infrastructure characterised by shared public space. All the buildings along the central axis on either side of Fox Street will include retail pockets to encourage activity along the spine from east to west. Project Watch GASS Architecture Studios has placed major emphasis on the precinct’s public realm. While they have made pragmatic provision for vehicle access at key points around the peripheries of the precinct, where there will be safe parking and drop-off areas for deliveries and services off the busy main arteries, the precinct will be largely pedestrianised along its central axis. The quality of the shared public space will be enhanced with single-level sidewalks, subtly broadening the walkable space on a level plane. The introduction of lighting, trees and vegetation, seating and easy wayfinding prompts will further humanise the streetscape. The quality of the public space and the broader architectural character of the precinct is designed not only to catalyse and support a greater diversity of people within the precinct, but also to invite and encourage further investment into the CBD. More broadly, the development opens up the potential for other key nodes of urban development such as Maboneng, the planned Absa Precinct and further developments along Fox Street to merge and form an integrated walkable city. Sustained by a belief in the transformative potential of urban design and architecture to catalyse economic and social energy, dignity and prosperity, GASS Architecture Studios has re-envisioned this all-but-defunct industrial complex into a series of thoughtful interventions that breathe new life into Johannesburg’s CBD, while remining respectful of its heritage. 13