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Town common (braak means "fallow land") bounded on the north by Alexander Street, on the east by Bird Street, Mill Square and the Church of the Rhenish Mission, on the south by property transferred to J. W. Palen, and on the west by Bloem Street, and the Church of the Rhenish Mission. Stellenbosch: Stellenbosch Provincial Heritage Site
The R304 (Bird Street; Koelenhof Road) connects Stellenbosch with Klipheuwel and Atlantis to the north-west. The R310 (Adams Tas Street; Helshoogte Road) connects Stellenbosch with Franschhoek to the east and Muizenberg to the south-west. Stellenbosch is also served by two metropolitan routes linking it to nearby towns in the City of Cape Town.
English: Map of municipal boundaries in the Western Cape, as they will be after the municipal elections of 18 May 2011, with the Stellenbosch Local Municipality highlighted in red. Based on File:Map of the Western Cape with municipalities blank (2011).svg.
The R304 between the village of Koelenhof and the N1 en-route to Stellenbosch. Its north-western origin is a junction with the R307 (Dassenberg Drive) adjacent to Mamre Nature Garden north of Atlantis (south of Mamre). It heads south-south-east as Charel Uys Drive to enter the centre of Atlantis, where it becomes Reygersdal Avenue towards the ...
As remembrance to this event a street was named Tulbagh. This street, together with Vredekloof Street in Vredekloof, Brackenfell, is known for the bird Cape robin-chat commonly known as Jan Frederik. [14] The bastions of the Castle of Good Hope were remembered in street names, namely Leerdam, Buren, Katzenellenbogen and Nassau. [15]
Oom Samie se Winkel (Afrikaans for Uncle Samie's Shop) is a tourist attraction and one of the oldest surviving shops in Stellenbosch, South Africa.It is a known general dealer in Dorp street and is famous for operating almost in exactly the same way as it did in the Victorian era. [1]
The Stellenbosch Synagogue, formally the Stellenbosch Hebrew Congregation, is an Orthodox Jewish congregation and synagogue, located at 44 Ryneveld Street, in Stellenbosch, in the Western Cape region of South Africa. The congregation was established in 1900 and moved into its current building in 1923.
It was originally built to house exclusively black migrant male labourers employed on the farms in the Stellenbosch area. In 1966, the nine largest employers in the Stellenbosch district including Stellenbosch University , the town administration, several vineyards and a fruit packing company united to erect 38 ready-made homes, so called hostels.