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Contents

   



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1 History  





2 Design  





3 Heritage Status  





4 References  














Corona Lodge







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Corona Lodge
The corona Lodge in Berea
General information
StatusCompleted
TypeResidential
LocationBerea, South Africa[1]
Completed1902
Height
Roof95 metres (312 ft)
Design and construction
Architect(s)J.A Cope

Corona Lodge was constructed as a Masonic Society Lodge in 1902. It is situated on stand 62 (1494) on O’Reilly Road in the Berea district of Johannesburg. Corona Lodge is one of the few remaining original buildings in this part of the city. The architect of the original building was J A Cope Christie.

History

[edit]
Hebrew text from when the building was used by the Jewish community

The foundation stone of the building was laid by W Bro. S. Sykes W.M. on 1 November 1902.[2]

The Corona Lodge fell out of use around 1920. When Coronoa Lodge was taken over by the Palestine Society in about 1935 it became the meeting place for the Jewish Society and the Jewish community from Palestine who settled in Berea.

The lodge was used by the precursor to the Yeshiva College of South Africa, which was established in 1953. The Yeshiva Katanah divided classes between Corona Lodge and the Beth Hamedrash Hagadol in Doornfontein. Afternoon classes were held at the lodge under the supervision of Rabbi Michel Kossowsky, an Eastern European Talmudic scholar who had settled in South Africa during the Holocaust, and Rabbi Baruch Rabinowitz. The subjects the rabbis taught classes around Talmud, Mishnah, Prophets, Laws and Customs and Ethics of Judaism.[3]

As this community dispersed the building was used no longer as a place of religion.

In 1985, the decision was made that it should be sold and although rights were held for the development of a twenty-storey block of flats, it was proposed to convert the lodge to office accommodation.[4]

Design

[edit]

The original building comprised a two-storey structure facing onto O’Reilly Road and the single storey lodge was behind this. At some stage the single storey building was razed by fire.[5]

The building is constructed in brown brick with a projecting curved bay to the entrance. The ground floor is in brown brick, whilst the first floor has brown brick surrounds to the windows only with white render between. Stained glass and decorative grilles adorn the windows. Black and white tiles provide an elegant floor to the entrance hall. Other significant features include pressed ceilings, barrel vault skylight and double volume board room.

The adaptation of the building for office use was undertaken by architects Montgomerie Oldfield Kirby Denn Brobbelaar. The architects of the project received an ISAA award of merit for their design solution, which included sensitive conversion and a sympathetic three storey extension to the rear. The interior is a total of 976 square metres.[6]

Heritage Status

[edit]

The Corona Lodge is historically and culturally significant for the following reasons:

References

[edit]
  • ^ Photograph of memorial stone in the Johannesburg Heritage Foundation archive
  • ^ The Bnei Akiva Yeshiva and the founding of Johannesburg's Yeshiva College Jewish Affairs. Rosh Hashanah 2011
  • ^ Corona Lodge, Planning 97 magazine. 49-55
  • ^ Corona Lodge, Planning 97 magazine. 49-55
  • ^ The Star newspaper, auction advert, 24 October 1996.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Corona_Lodge&oldid=1227045852"

    Categories: 
    Buildings and structures in Johannesburg
    Buildings and structures completed in 1902
    Heritage Buildings in Johannesburg
    20th-century architecture in South Africa
    Jews and Judaism in Johannesburg
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    Articles with dead external links from March 2022
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