Riviera Mansions is one of earliest suburban apartment blocks in Johannesburg together with Whitehall Court (1923 – 24) by JA Moffat in neighbouring Killarney, Brenthurst Place (previously Clive Mansions) Clarendon Circle by S. P. H. Mitchelson (1928), and Murray Gordon Mansions (1918 – 1919) by J Waterson located in Westcliff, where the Westcliff hotel is now situated (Chipkin 1993:70).
Timeline
Historian Gerard van der Waal (1987: 221) noted that apartment buildings were mostly built together with retail on the ground floor. However from the 1920’s and 1930’s apartment complexes developed as a distinct and independent building type. These buildings were significant architectural contributions to suburban Johannesburg.
Early examples tended to show the influence of the late Victorian models. Rooms were strung along corridors or passages based on a grid scheme. The façade was lightly articulated with a few decorative elements while rich materials were used to finish the lobbies to make a favourable impression on those entering for the first time.
Prominent features included the articulation of the façade with a central entrance articulated in the mass of the building, creating a friendly reference to traditional domestic architecture. A second feature was the use of balconies which became a means of identification for the buildings. Balconies became a link between the interior and exterior, reminiscent of the veranda house. Built in the same material as the façade the balconies were visually an integrated element of the whole, but isolated in the fact that they were dedicated to individual apartments. Social space began to move from the communal to the individual. Built-in cupboards and dedicated bathrooms were features of the more affluent flat, with kitchens often being equipped with the most modern appliances of the time such as a refrigerator and an electric stove.
General Protection: Section 34 (1) Structures under the National Heritage Resources Act, 1999.
A culmination of research gathered over many years, the Online Johannesburg Heritage Register is being launched on Nelson Mandela Day 18 July 2025.
Among the many heritage sites featured is Chancellor House, the downtown offices of Mandela and Tambo Attorneys in the 1950s. After having been vacant and shuttered for more than a decade, this iconic building is being revived and brought to life once again as offices for the Community Development Department, which oversees the City’s Arts, Culture & Heritage Services.