Cemetery Noun an Area Set Apart for Or Containing { Graves, Tombs, Or Funeral Urns }

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Cemetery Noun an Area Set Apart for Or Containing { Graves, Tombs, Or Funeral Urns } cemetery noun an area set apart for or containing { graves, tombs, or funeral urns } 173 6. RETHINKING CEMETERY DESIGN AND Management: JOHannesburg AND THE Diepsloot MEMORIAL PARK Tsepang Leuta Introduction ARK In Johannesburg, South Africa, there has been an attempt to introduce more innovative approaches to cemetery P planning. The Diepsloot Memorial Park is one of the City of Johannesburg (COJ) Metropolitan Municipality’s AL ground-breaking cemetery developments. Its development was a response to Johannesburg’s diminishing burial I land. Instead of designing a conventional style cemetery that most people are used to, Johannesburg City Parks EMOR and Zoo, an entity of the COJ, proposed a development to serve as both a place for internment and as part ANAGEMENT: M of the city’s green lung open park area to benefit the residents of Diepsloot and the surrounding areas of M Johannesburg (Nelana, Pers. Comm., 2015). It was appropriately designated the Diepsloot Memorial Park and cost R17 million to develop. It opened its gates to the Diepsloot community and its surrounding areas in April 2007 (Johannesburg City Parks and Zoo, 2007). The cemetery is located in one of the COJ’s seven regions, EPSLOOT EPSLOOT GN AND GN Region A in the province of Gauteng (Map 6.1 below),. It was envisioned to accommodate a total of 120 000 I DI ES burials not including second burials or interring the cremains, the ashes from cremation. In responding to E D shortage of space in for burial ceremonies, the cemetery would relieve others such as Avalon Cemetery in H Soweto and serve the growing Diepsloot community. EMETERY EMETERY C NG I NK ANNESBURG AND T AND ANNESBURG HI H ET R JO Researching and Documenting Innovative Responses to Urban Pressures 174 Map 6.1: Location of Diepsloot and Diepsloot Memorial Park JO H R ET ANNESBURG AND T AND ANNESBURG HI NK I NG C EMETERY EMETERY H E D DI ES EPSLOOT EPSLOOT I GN AND GN M M EMOR ANAGEMENT: ANAGEMENT: Source: Author’s formulation I AL Unlike other older cemeteries, from conception the Diepsloot Memorial Park was designed with a slightly P ARK different purpose. It is located in the Diepsloot Township an area facing many social ills. These include accelerating unemployment rates, crime, and youth unemployment, poor service delivery and inadequate housing. Looking from the outside, the memorial park gives the area a visual break from the congested informal structures characterising the township. When the cemetery first opened its gates, it allowed only flat plaques. Neither full- body memorials nor headstones were permitted. That changed as the cemetery has since developed a section that allows tombstones, according to Mr. Moloi (Pers. Comm., 2015), the Cemeteries and Crematoria Manager at Johannesburg City Parks and Zoo. This was the culmination of community uproars provoked by a range of socio-cultural and political influences (Nelana, Pers. Comm., 2015). 175 This study identified a recently completed cemetery that shows an element of innovation by recognising elements of creativity and originality. By exposing reasons that led to its development and users’ perceptions, research was undertaken to assess whether its construction has had any significant impact on the area where it is located. Since the design integrates both burial and recreation functions the general public’s view of this different approach for a cemetery was sought. It is against this background that the study took Diepsloot Memorial Park as a case study as it reflects a move towards an innovative design in the provision of cemeteries. After briefly discussing the background of cemeteries as a social institution, the objectives of the study are stated. The theoretical framework that grounds the theme of this research looks through the lens of Rogers’ ARK P (1995) ‘diffusion of innovations’ theory. This chapter scrutinises the innovative practice employed in the design AL of Diepsloot Memorial Park. The extent to which people are open to seeing cemeteries beyond their primary I role and the barriers that affect the diffusion of its adoption are identified. Assuming a shift took place, the design itself and its objectives are examined, and the challenges the final product faces are determined, as is the EMOR ANAGEMENT: ANAGEMENT: possibility of it merely being a replication of other international cemeteries. M M A description of the methodology that addresses the objectives follows, and then the conclusions and recommendations emerging from the findings are presented. Two particular points to note are an assessment of the potential of the design of the Diepsloot Memorial Park for upscaling and adaptation in other South African EPSLOOT GN AND GN I cities, and how a cemetery and adapted models could potentially be used to transform the functioning of the DI ES E areas in which they are located. D H Background to Cemeteries South Africa is home to a rich variety of cultural and religious belief systems, in which cemeteries play a crucial EMETERY EMETERY role in people’s lives. This is visible on important holidays such as Easter and Christmas Day when families and C friends visit cemeteries, and gather by gravesites to remember and pray for their dead. In Johannesburg, families NG own graves in perpetuity. This means that the Johannesburg City Parks and Zoo incurs ever-increasing demands I for burial space and increasing maintenance costs. NK ANNESBURG AND T AND ANNESBURG HI However, due to their land-consuming nature, cemeteries occupy significant areas and thus echo the historical H ET legacy of these areas. Cemeteries are under immense pressure from urban growth and development. Like most R JO basic services and bulk infrastructure, they are susceptible to impacts of rapid urbanisation, increasing population growth, and environmental and climate change. Integrating some green infrastructure elements within cemeteries as the Johannesburg City Parks and Zoo is currently doing, could help them respond to urban development challenges. For instance, they could potentially provide ecosystem services such as climate regulation, carbon sequestration, water infiltration and curbing erosion. Increasing greenery within cemeteries could help reduce run-off, increase natural infiltration and can thus help to control flooding. The use of vegetation instead of impervious surfaces increases interception levels. The current climate change impacts will continue to negatively impact the built environment and further intensify urban challenges. These challenges cut across continents and will eventually require governments and insurance companies to incur greater costs for repair and to provide new infrastructure (Development Bank of South Africa, 2011). Researching and Documenting Innovative Responses to Urban Pressures 176 Generally, people are uncomfortable with considering the realities of death. Any discussion concerned with the planning, design and management of cemeteries is bound to be sensitive. Hence, any proposed change could lead to resistance from the users of these spaces. However, eventually change will have to be effected, given the number of pressures facing government. These concern the diminishing availability of land suitable for burial, fiscal constraints, environmental concerns and the reluctance to move away from conventional planning practices. In most cases, the upkeep of cemeteries is depleting municipal budgets. It is clear that with many of JO the solutions being applied to the use or reuse of the cemeteries in South Africa, practical approaches tend H R ET ANNESBURG AND T AND ANNESBURG to outweigh other factors (Wilkins, 2011). For these and other reasons, cities will have to be proactive and HI innovative, whilst cemetery users will have to eventually adapt. Religious and cultural beliefs impact strongly on NK the acceptability of solutions being proposed by metropolitan authorities (Wilkins, 2011) particularly regarding I NG cemeteries. C EMETERY EMETERY Often a cemetery is the only relic left from early settlements and as such is a critical link with the past (Uslu, 2010). Cemeteries provide quiet places to honour and celebrate the deceased, whether it is of a most personal nature, or on a local, regional or even national scale (King et al., 2004). “By viewing cemeteries as incarnations H of personal and cultural identity and history, people are motivated to be custodians of such spaces, taking action E D DI to maintain, restore, and improve their community, the landscape, and larger ecosystems” (Hester, 2006:364). ES EPSLOOT EPSLOOT Such efforts also have the potential to bring community members together for a common cause (Harker, 2012) I GN AND GN using different platforms. In cities, cemeteries are part of the urban system and can improve quality of life for urban dwellers through M M providing the aesthetic, recreational, educational, cultural and spiritual experiences in people’s daily lives. For EMOR ANAGEMENT: ANAGEMENT: those still living, cemeteries hold deeper meanings as they are believed to house loved ones whose memories are rarely forgotten. According to Murray (2003), cemeteries are established for the disposal of human remains I AL but also offer solace and education to the living: “The cemetery landscape was central to the cemetery ideal’s vision, where nature and religion combined to produce a sublime environment” (Murray, 2003:130). Due to its P ARK distinctive function and sanctity, a cemetery is perceived as essential in enforcing public morals (ibid.). Moreover, they are also viewed as a space that
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