Contact Artefacts
please if you have any comments or more information regarding this record.

Rust-en-Vrede
Durbanville, Western Cape

Date:c1850
Type:Homestead
Style:Cape Dutch
Status:Extant

 


Click to view map

Coordinates:
33°49'54.52" S 18°38'55.80" E Alt: 153m

Rust-en-Vrede was originally built in the 1840s as a prison and police headquarters. It also served as a magistrate’s court. It is here that the first village management committee meetings were held. In 1901, with the registering of Durbanville as a municipality, the first council meetings were also held in the building.

In 1927 the building was sold to Mr Robert John Meneely, a clock maker. During this time, the building was converted into four semi-detached houses: The Oaks, Ingle Nook, My Vreugd and The Retreat, with the Meneely’s occupying the main section. Mr Meneely was a charming but eccentric gentleman who, during his retirement years, filled the house with a great number of antique clocks, all ticking away lustily.

After the demise of Mr and Mrs Meneely the municipality bought the property from the Meneely estate in 1978 and the slow process of restoration began. It was during this time, in 1981, that the Durbanville Cultural Society was officially established. It was decided that, in conjunction with the Council, the Durbanville Cultural Society would run the building as an Arts and Culture Centre. The complex now houses a gallery, clay museum, various art studios and a coffee shop, YOCO Eatery. (Source: Rust-en-Vrede)

The building was declared a National Monument in 1984 and is now a Provincial Heritage Site.