Cyrildene | |
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Cyrildene shown within Gauteng | |
Coordinates: 26°10′23″S 28°06′04″E / 26.173°S 28.101°ECoordinates: 26°10′23″S 28°06′04″E / 26.173°S 28.101°E | |
Country | South Africa |
Province | Gauteng |
Municipality | City of Johannesburg |
Main Place | Johannesburg |
Established | 1938 |
Area | |
• Total | 1.20 km2 (0.46 sq mi) |
Population (2011) | |
• Total | 3,417 |
• Density | 2,800/km2 (7,400/sq mi) |
Racial makeup (2011) | |
• Black African | 26.5% |
• Coloured | 3.0% |
• Indian/Asian | 33.9% |
• White | 31.1% |
• Other | 5.5% |
First languages (2011) | |
• English | 55.8% |
• Zulu | 3.7% |
• Afrikaans | 3.4% |
• Northern Sotho | 2.1% |
• Other | 35.0% |
Postal code (street) | 2198 |
Cyrildene is a suburb of Johannesburg, South Africa. The area is found east of the Johannesburg CBD and is surrounded by the suburbs of Linksfield, Observatory and Bruma. It is noted for a new Chinatown that exists on Derrick Avenue. This new Chinatown is now considered as the main Chinatown in Johannesburg, replacing the declining Chinatown on Commissioner Street in the inner-city of Johannesburg. It is located in Region E.
The suburb is situated on part of an old Witwatersrand farm called Doornfontein. It would be proclaimed as suburb on 18 May 1938 and was named after the land developers son, Cyril Cooper.
Up until approximately 2000 Cyrildene was a predominantly Jewish neighborhood. Unlike the old and now largely abandoned Chinatown in Newtown, which was largely made up of second or third generation South African Chinese, new inhabitants of the Chinatown in Cyrildene are overwhelmingly first generation Chinese immigrants from mainland China. The Chinatown has a paifang (arch).