Museum Africa in Newtown tells the story of life in South Africa from the Stone Age to the Nuclear Age and beyond.
The Market Theatre complex comprises three theatres, an art gallery, restaurants and pubs. A bronze statue of the champion of pas- sive resistance, Mahatma Gandhi, can be seen in the city centre.
The Lesedi Cultural Village in the Swartkops hills north of Johannesburg gives visitors the opportunity to meet families of different cultural groupings. It features four traditional home- steads where visitors can spend the night with a family of their choice.
The Phumangena Zulu Kraal is home to traditional Zulu people living and working there. The Melville Koppies in Johannesburg was once the site of a Stone Age African village and iron-smelting works. Flora include 80% of the species recorded on the Witwatersrand. It is
open to the public from September to April. Gold Reef City is a theme park based on
Johannesburg during the gold-rush era.
The Apartheid Museum in Johannesburg is a state-of-the-art tribute to the rise and fall of apartheid, with 22 exhibition areas that take the visitor on an emotional journey through the state-sanctioned system of apartheid.
A team of curators, film-makers, historians, designers and architects assembled the exhib- its on a seven-hectare site.