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Pinelands, Cape Town

Coordinates:33°55′54″S18°30′46″E / 33.93167°S 18.51278°E /-33.93167; 18.51278
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Place in Western Cape, South Africa
Pinelands
A view down Forest Drive, entering Pinelands
A view down Forest Drive, entering Pinelands
Map
Street map of Pinelands
Pinelands is located in Western Cape
Pinelands
Pinelands
Show map of Western Cape
Pinelands is located in South Africa
Pinelands
Pinelands
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Pinelands is located in Africa
Pinelands
Pinelands
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Coordinates:33°55′54″S18°30′46″E / 33.93167°S 18.51278°E /-33.93167; 18.51278
CountrySouth Africa
ProvinceWestern Cape
MunicipalityCity of Cape Town
Main PlaceCape Town
Established1919
Government
 • CouncillorRiad Davids (DA)
Area
 • Total
5.86 km2 (2.26 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[1]
 • Total
14,198
 • Density2,420/km2 (6,280/sq mi)
Racial makeup (2011)
 • Black African13.5%
 • Coloured15.1%
 • Indian/Asian5.1%
 • White62.3%
 • Other4.0%
First languages (2011)
 • English81.5%
 • Afrikaans8.4%
 • Xhosa3.5%
 • Other6.5%
Time zoneUTC+2 (SAST)
Postal code (street)
7405
PO box
7430
Area code(021) 531/2

Pinelands is agarden city suburb located on the northern edge of thesouthern suburbs ofCape Town,South Africa, neighbouring the suburb ofThornton, and is known for its large thatched houses and green spaces. The suburb is primarily residential and is often praised for its peacefulness and abundance oftrees. Pinelands is one of the few areas in Cape Town in which sale ofalcohol to the public is prohibited, but some clubs have private liquor licenses. It is a popular place forsenior citizens to retire to. While there are severalretirement homes in the suburb, younger people are increasingly moving in.

The main road is called Forest Drive and the suburb contains two small shopping centres, namely Howard Centre (named afterEbenezer Howard who led the garden city movement) and Central Square.Dutch Reformed,Anglican,Presbyterian,Methodist and Catholic (Society of St. Pius X) churches are located near to Central Square, whileBaptist,Church of England in South Africa and mainstreamCatholic churches are located elsewhere in the suburb. Pinelands is served by twoMetrorailrailway stations:Pinelands station on the western edge of the suburb andMutual station on the northern edge. The suburb is bisected from the north east to the south west by theElsieskraal River, which has flowed through a large concrete drainage canal since the 1970s. Elsieskraal River also flows through the neighbouring suburb ofThornton, which is a similar residential suburb with an abundance of trees.

Thepostcodes for Pinelands are 7405 for street addresses and 7430 or 7450 forpost office boxes. The telephone exchange codes for Pinelands are predominantly 531 and 532 (within the 021 dialling code for Cape Town).

History & development

[edit]
Foundation stone commemorating the establishment of Pinelands in 1923.

The layout of Pinelands is based on the then revolutionary Garden Cities methodology of town planning by the British town-planner, Sir Ebenezer Howard. It was originally aVictorian era farm named Uitvlugt that had thousands ofpine trees planted in it, and was later deemed an economic failure by the Department of Forestry. In the aftermath of the outbreak of the bubonic plague in Cape Town in February 1901, the colonial health authorities invoked Public Health Act of 1897 and quickly established a location in Uitvlugt forest station (modern day Pinelands). Black Africans living in District Six were rounded up under armed guard and taken to the location of Uitvlugt. This area was initially established primarily to quarantine Black Africans who were forcibly relocated after the outbreak of the disease, furthering efforts of the government at the time to push Black and Coloured communities to the outskirts of the city. This marked the beginning of forced removals in Cape Town in the twentieth century.

Almost 22 years later, the land was then granted to "The Garden Cities Trust" and the foundingDeed of Trust was signed in 1919. One of the first members of the trust,Richard Stuttaford (head of the department storeStuttafords), made a£10,000 gift donation to serve as capital, and a loan of £15,000 from the government was invested in Pinelands. The trust brought in an overseas expert, Albert John Thompson, in 1920 to design the area.

The first (thatched) house in Pinelands to be occupied was 3 Mead Way and was built in February 1922. The house and entire street, including The Mead were declared anational monument in 1983. The original township area is currently a proposed heritage area. Pinelands converted to amunicipality in 1948 and in 1996 merged into theCity of Cape Townmetropolitan municipality. The old Pinelands Town Council offices now accommodate the Pinelands Subcouncil.

Demographics

[edit]

According to the2011 census, the population of Pinelands was 14,198 people in 4,917 households. The following tables show various demographic data about Pinelands from that census.[2]

Gender
GenderPopulation%
Female7,59653.5%
Male6,60246.5%
Ethnic Group
GroupPopulation%
Black African1,91713.5%
Coloured2,14215.1%
Indian/Asian7205.1%
White8,84562.3%
Other5744.0%
Home Language
LanguagePopulation%
English10,86881.5%
Afrikaans1,1258.4%
Xhosa4703.5%
Other SA languages2972.2%
Other languages5684.3%
Age
Age rangePopulation%
0–48055.7%
5–141,51710.7%
15–242,02314.3%
25–647,50852.9%
65+2,34316.5%

Infrastructure & amenities

[edit]

Road names

[edit]

Many of theroad names in Pinelands have originated from local history or from places in England. One such road is named Uitvlugt (original Dutch) after the historical farm of the same name that covered what is now Pinelands. There are also roads namedLetchworth andWelwyn after the first two garden cities in England. Other roads in Pinelands are named after places in theLake District in England, the Royal Family as well as the names ofbirds,trees andflowers. Despite the attitude displayed to the sale of alcohol in Pinelands, there is a section where all the roads are named after well known wine farms.

Schools

[edit]

In Pinelands there are three public primary schools, each of which is commonly known in the community by a colour: Pinelands Primary School ("The Blue School"), Pinelands North Primary School ("The Red School") and Pinehurst Primary School ("The Green School").Pinelands High School is a public high school, centrally located in the suburb.Cannons Creek Independent School is a private combined primary and high school. Grace Primary School is a Christian primary school embracing aCharlotte Mason education philosophy.[3] There are three private pre-primaries in Pinelands: Meerendal Pre-Primary, La Gratitude Pre-Primary, Learn and Play Centre Pre-School and Old Mutual for their employees. The high school campus of Vista Nova (a school for children with cerebral palsy and other special needs) is located in the suburb. The Pinelands Campus of theCollege of Cape Town while located in Maitland is on the northern edge of Pinelands and draws students from all over Cape Town.

Sports

[edit]

Pinelands has sporting facilities includingtennis andlawn bowling clubs. Other sports include thecricket andhockey clubs situated at The Oval sports grounds situated on St. Stephens Road just off Forest Drive. Pinelands hockey club was founded in 1937 and is currently one of the largest clubs in the country fielding 12 men’s teams and 7 ladies teams in the Western Province Hockey Union league. Both the men’s and ladies’ first teams play in the Grand Challenge league with the men's team having won the title for the first time in 2006. In 2008 Pinelands Hockey Club produced three Olympians – Marvin Bam, Paul Blake and Austin Smith. Austin Smith was made the South African Men's Captain, having first played hockey for the Red School and the Pinelands High School.

Politics

[edit]

Pinelands is part ofward 53 of theCity of Cape Town.[4] The ward also includesThornton,Maitland Garden Village,Epping Industria 1,Ndabeni and part ofMaitland; the current ward councillor is Riad Davids of theDemocratic Alliance.[5] Of the six voting districts in this ward, three of them cover Pinelands: the voting stations are at the Pinelands Primary School, Pinelands High School, and Pinehurst Primary School. Generally, the majority of voters in the Pinelands area of the Ward vote for the Democratic Alliance.

The following tables show the sum of the votes cast in the three Pinelands voting districts at the most recent national, provincial and local elections.

National election (2019)
PartyVotes%
Democratic Alliance5,49274.7%
African National Congress89412.2%
African Christian Democratic Party2954.0%
Good1462.0%
Economic Freedom Fighters1431.9%
26 other parties3865.2%
Total7,356100%
Provincial election (2019)
PartyVotes%
Democratic Alliance5,89280.4%
African National Congress5137.0%
Good2883.9%
African Christian Democratic Party2072.8%
Economic Freedom Fighters1301.8%
22 other parties2984.1%
Total7,328100%
Local election (2021)

Proportional Representation vote

PartyVotes%
Democratic Alliance4,65881.0%
Good3145.5%
African Christian Democratic Party1963.4%
African National Congress1642.9%
46 other parties41.87.3%
Total5,750100%
Local election (2021)

Ward vote

CandidateVotes%
Riad Davids (DA)5,14582.7%
Ingrid Simons (Good)2694.3%
Richard Bougard (ACDP)2484.0%
Brenda Skelenge (ANC)1923.1%
30 other candidates3685.9%
Total7,122100%

Coat of arms

[edit]
Coat of arms of Pinelands

In January 1949, the municipal council assumed a coat of arms, designed by F. de Beaumont Beech.[6] It registered the arms with the Cape Provincial Administration in July 1954[7] and at theBureau of Heraldry in July 1979.[8]

The arms were :Or, on a chevron Gules, between three fir-cones Sable, slipped and leaved Vert, three annulets Or (i.e. a golden shield depicting, from top to bottom, two black fir-cones with green leaves, a red chevron displaying three golden rings, and another black fir-cone with green leaves). The crest was a squirrel holding an acorn, and the motto wasFides – prudentia – labor.

Notable residents

[edit]
  • Colin Eglin, politician, grew up in Pinelands in the 1930s and was the area's ward councillor from 1951 to 1954.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcd"Sub Place Pinelands".Census 2011.
  2. ^"2011 Census Suburb Pinelands"(PDF).City of Cape Town. July 2013. Retrieved8 April 2020.
  3. ^"HOME".Grace Primary School. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  4. ^"Western Cape/City of Cape Town Metropolitan Municipality/Ward Number 53".Municipal Demarcation Board. Archived fromthe original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved2007-06-09.
  5. ^"Councillor details: Riad Davids".City of Cape Town. Retrieved13 November 2021.
  6. ^Western Cape Archives : Pinelands Municipal Minutes (27 January 1949).
  7. ^Cape of Good HopeOfficial Gazette 2711 (23 July 1954).
  8. ^"National Archives of South Africa (NASA)". Archived fromthe original on 2012-06-29.

External links

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