Groenkloof

Groenkloof (Afrikaans for 'Green ravine') is a residential suburb of Pretoria, South Africa.

Groenkloof
Fort Klapperkop, Groenkloof
Groenkloof
Groenkloof
Coordinates: 25.775108°S 28.217957°E / -25.775108; 28.217957
CountrySouth Africa
ProvinceGauteng
MunicipalityCity of Tshwane
Main PlacePretoria
Area
  Total2.83 km2 (1.09 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[1]
  Total4,946
  Density1,700/km2 (4,500/sq mi)
Racial makeup (2011)
  Black African33.7%
  Coloured2.9%
  Indian/Asian2.4%
  White59.4%
  Other1.7%
First languages (2011)
  Afrikaans44.2%
  English40.5%
  Northern Sotho3.2%
  Tswana3.2%
  Other9.0%
Time zoneUTC+2 (SAST)
Postal code (street)
0181
PO box
0027

This wealthy suburb in Pretoria is famous for its white Jacaranda trees. It is close to the city centre, and to the well-known Brooklyn Square and Menlyn Park shopping centres. The University of Pretoria main campus is only 3 km drive and it is a few minutes from the N14 freeway linking Pretoria and Johannesburg (via the N1).

The suburb lies between Koningin Wilhelmina avenue to the East, George Storrar avenue to the North and Fort Klapperkop to the South. Herbert Baker- and van Wouw- streets are some of the well-known streets in the area and home to some of the city's wealthiest residents.

Groenkloof Safety Initiative

The Groenkloof Safety Initiative, GSI, is a community effort to reduce crime inside the suburb. The initiative was founded in 2007 after a meeting of the Groenkloof Policing Forum. GSI works in partnership with the SAPS[2] as well as private security companies in the area. One of the main services of the GSI is conveying information of recent crimes as well as suspicious activity in the area. This is done through SMSes as well as a Facebook page.[3] Public meetings for the residents are also held regularly. Currently underway is a Monitored Access Project which aims to restrict the movement of criminals in and out of Groenkloof. As of 11 December 2014, the monitored access project is viable with submission target 30 January 2015 pending the expected approval of the Japanese Embassy.[4]

gollark: ML uses floating points.
gollark: As far as I know nobody has even managed to accurately simulate a nematode (300 or so neurons).
gollark: There *are* multimodal image/language models which work.
gollark: I have not.
gollark: And it clearly isn't what we might stereotypically think of an AI as, since it isn't agenty and doesn't even have writable memory.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.