top of page

PROJECT

REMNANTS OF THE PAST - FIGMENT OF THE FUTURE: Exploring The Dialogue Between Old and New Through The Design of an Archive and Exhibition Facility; an Extension to South End Museum

PROJECT SUMMARY

In Gqeberha, a suburb called South End is a landscape of absence—brownfields and dereliction marking the spaces where life was erased, yet never fully gone. The past lingers, unsettled. The scars of apartheid’s engineered division remain, but so do the echoes of what once was. This project is not solely about reconstruction, but revelation—an emergent architecture that adapts to the weight of its history.
Through adaptive reuse, fragments of culture, meaning, and memory are reassembled into a typology that does not replace but remembers—an architecture that bears witness, inhabits the present, and anticipates what is yet to come. A passage through time. In the tension between past and present, architecture becomes a mediator—reckoning with what remains, reconnecting what was severed.

VIEW PROJECT

<

Thapelo Douse

representing 

Nelson Mandela University

why did you choose to study architecture?

I chose to study architecture to fulfill a dream I had as a six-year-old. But as I grew older, I realised that dreams often collide with the harsh realities of the world. Now that I’ve ‘fulfilled’ that childhood dream, I see it as a foundation to build upon. As creatives, we have a certain artistic power, and I want to use mine to leave the world in a slightly more beautiful state than I found it.

bottom of page