The V&A Waterfront, often referred to as The Waterfront and The V&A, is a mixed-use suburb in Cape Town, South Africa, featuring upmarket residential apartments, a major shopping mall, a marina, and multiple large hotels.

The Waterfront sits on the site of the oldest working harbor in the Southern Hemisphere. With Table Mountain as its backdrop, the 123-hectare neighbourhood sees millions of people visiting each year. The V&A Waterfront is Cape Town's most popular tourist destination by number of visitors per year.

The mall is one of Cape Town's largest, and the Waterfront features numerous other retail spaces, including the Watershed, and Alfred Mall.

Properties

thumb|right|274px|Waterfront apartments in the foreground and Signal Hill in the background

thumb|274px|[[Two Oceans Aquarium]]

thumb|274px|Victoria & Alfred Waterfront Swing Bridge

The V&A Waterfront is a mixed-use property that contains:

  • 180 business tenants
  • 450+ shops
  • 101 entertainment activities
  • 80+ eateries
  • 13 hotels
  • Seven museums
  • 22 historical landmarks
  • 15 conference venues

Within the Waterfront are offices for Investec, Deloitte, Radisson Hotels, EY, Allan Gray, Pam Golding Property Group, Duracell, British American Tobacco, Red Bull, BP, and Ninety One. The area is also home to Lexus, Toyota, Ferrari, Aston Martin, Audi, and VW dealerships.

The V&A also houses the Cape Business Center for conferences, and Workshop 17 for coworking.

History

thumb|274px|Cape Town waterfront harbour

thumb|274px|Victoria & Alfred Hotel at Victoria & Alfred Waterfront

thumb|274px|A boat near the Waterway House

thumb|274px|Zeitz Mocaa and Radisson Red Hotel

The V&A Waterfront is a central part of the very beginning of the settlement of the city of Cape Town. In 1654, two years after his arrival in this relatively safe bay at the foot of Table Mountain, Jan van Riebeeck built a small jetty as part of his task to establish a refreshment station at the Cape. Kreiner later became the council-nominated director on the board of the Victoria and Alfred Waterfront Company.

Harbour expansion and reclamation

The discovery of gold and diamonds in South Africa meant that the first section of harbour, the Alfred Basin, was not large enough to accommodate the increased number of ships, and the Victoria Basin was built. The construction of these two harbour basins took place between 1860 and 1920, and this area of the harbour still has an array of outstanding heritage buildings from this era.

In 1938 work was started to reclaim land between the city centre and the harbour, most notably the new Duncan Dock. The Foreshore (230 hectares) made city expansion possible. In the early 20th century, South Africa depended mainly on imports for many basic articles in daily use, which explains the importance of the harbour to the people who lived here.

The Victoria & Alfred Waterfront today

In November 1988, Victoria and Alfred Waterfront (Pty) Ltd was established as a wholly owned subsidiary by Transnet Ltd. Its aim was to redevelop the historic docklands around the Victoria and Alfred Basins as a mixed-use area with a focus on retail, tourism and residential development with a working harbour at its centre.

Today it is a mixed-use development that spans 23 hectares, with 24 million visitors a year. Over 23 000 people work and live within its neighbourhood.

Neighbourhood

thumb|274px|upright|alt=|The Cape Wheel in 2022

The V&A Waterfront has several distinct districts.

Canal District

This urban district connects the V&A waterfront to the City of Cape Town. The area contains Battery Park, and a spa and showroom at Waterway House.

Clocktower District

This district contains the Port Captain's Office and clock tower, built in 1882, retail facilities, and the Nelson Mandela Gateway, from where the ferries to Robben Island depart. The clock tower has begun to lean slightly to one side, although further leaning has now been halted.

Portswood Ridge District

This district connects the V&A waterfront and the Atlantic Seaboard, and includes the UCT Graduate School of Business, a golf course, the corporate offices and Deloitte HQ, and an urban garden.

Silo District

This district includes the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa, the Southern Guild design gallery, restaurants, bars, hotels and office space. It sits next to the Cape Town Cruise Terminal, which also houses Makers Landing.

South Arm District

This district contains industrial space, and a harbour where fishing industries operate. Commercial vessels also berth at this harbour.

Developments

The V&A Waterfront has seen development in the Silo district, which currently houses the headquarters of Allan Gray Investment Management at Silo 1 and apartments at Silo 2. The project was completed in 2017 with a Virgin Active gym, the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa, and the adjoining Silo Hotel.

Notable attractions at the V&A Waterfront

  • Breakwater Lodge (University of Cape Town Graduate School of Business)
  • Chavonnes Battery
  • Nobel Square
  • SAS Somerset
  • Two Oceans Aquarium
  • Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa

References

  • Official web site
  • V&A Waterfront – The Story of its Development