I’ve been visiting the Rand Club, one of Joburg’s most historic buildings, for years.
The Rand Club is on the corner of Fox and Loveday Streets in downtown Joburg. Although the club was founded in 1887, the current clubhouse was built in 1904. Read an in-depth history of the Rand Club building here.
I’ve blogged about the club before and gone there for various events, which I always enjoy. But I hadn’t considered joining the Rand Club until last month, while I was getting a pedicure.
Let me back up a bit.
Looking up at the Rand Club’s iconic dome.A sketch Thorsten made of the Rand Club.
A few years ago, while touring the Rand Club, I met a woman named Alicia Thompson. Alicia is a member at the club and we became friends. Alicia mentioned she runs her own spa business and I started going for pedicures at her small spa in Albertville.
During one of these pedicures, Alicia told me she recently became the Rand Club’s new chairperson. She is the first Black person and only the second woman to chair the club, which is really freaking cool. Cecil John Rhodes founded the Rand Club in 1887 (just a year after Joburg was founded), and it was a men-only, whites-only club for the first 100-plus years of its existence.
Alicia Thompson, the Rand Club’s new chairperson, at the club’s members-only bar.Interesting fun fact about Alicia: She became a flight attendant for South African Airways in 1994, just a couple of months before the country’s first democratic elections, and was the top student in her SAA graduating class. (Alicia also has a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Wits University.) Her first flight as an SAA flight attendant was also her first time on an airplane.Alicia in the window of one of the Rand Club’s recently refurbished offices.
Then Alicia started telling me about all the cool things happening at the club right now. I got super excited, and a couple of weeks later I joined.
Joining the Rand Club
Becoming a member of a club has never been one of my life goals. It seemed like something my grandparents or great-grandparents would (and did) do – to gain access to a golf course, or a fancy dining room in the days before restaurants were a thing, or to network with other (white) people. What reason did I have to join such a club in the 21st century?
But the more I spoke to Alicia, the more I started thinking about how remarkable it is that the Rand Club has stood for the entire, tumultuous history of this city – especially over the last couple of decades as countless big companies and institutions have fled the Joburg CBD. The club survives, right in the center of downtown Joburg, because its members have overcome adversity (including a huge fire in 2005, which nearly destroyed the building), and adapted to the new South Africa in their own unique way.
Today the Rand Club is not only surviving, but thriving. I want to be part of what’s happening there, to encourage more development in the neighborhood, and to help the club continue to become more diverse and inclusive. And after two years of pandemic isolation, I need a little push to get back out into the city and have more fun.
Me in a hallway on the 4th floor of the Rand Club, which is currently being transformed into a small art gallery with work from the Living Artists Emporium. (Photo: Alicia Thompson)Also on the Rand Club’s 4th floor: The studio and workshop of acclaimed South African fashion designer, David Tlale. David is also a club member and moved his entire operation here earlier this year. Photos aren’t allowed inside the studio, but David’s website has beautiful pictures of his most recent collection, shot in the Rand Club’s library.
There are also lots of fun, tangible benefits to being a Rand Club member, which costs R860 (about $50) per month. The benefits below are just a small sample; see more here (this list is in the process of being updated).
25% off at the restaurant, which is now open to the public and serves really good food.
The Rand Club’s restaurant, which, like virtually the entire building, has been recently refurbished.Another look at the dining room.
25% off the club’s beautiful, brand-new boutique hotel rooms (also open to the public), and you get a free stay every year for your birthday. (More to come on this soon, as I have a birthday coming up.)
The bedroom in the Rand Club’s luxury suite.The suite also includes one of the biggest and most photogenic bathrooms I’ve ever seen.
I guess it’s wrong to say I’ve never blogged about 44 Stanley; I’ve mentioned it countless times over the years (see here and here) when writing about specific restaurants or shops that are there. But I’ve never written a dedicated post about 44 Stanley as a destination and it’s about time I did – especially now, with the holidays upon us.
Use the share button below if you liked it.
It makes me smile, when I see it.