Diplomacy
Embassies
South Africaâs Renovated Mission Encapsulates Traditions, Aspirations by Martin Austermuhle
S
ometimes a building is just that: a brick-and-mortar structure used for utilitarian purposes. But other times, a building is much more than a simple structure â itâs a symbol, and one that can speak to the traditions, values and aspirations of the organization and people within its walls. Thatâs what South African Ambassador Ebrahim Rasool hopes for the two buildings that have long served as the countryâs diplomatic presence in Washington and are approaching the end of a multiyear renovation. âUp until now, we have been entirely housed in a beautiful, historic set of buildings â but nothing that speaks about the new aspirations of our nation and how we represent that architecturally,â Rasool said during an interview from the embassyâs temporary offices in the Intelsat building in Van Ness. That will soon change, he told us, as the embassy prepares to complete a two-year renovation on the pair of buildings along Massachusetts Avenue that had long served as the ambassadorâs residence and chancery. But more than simply offer the growing South African diplomatic delegation a more modern workspace, Rasool said he hopes that they will serve as a physical testament to what South Africa was and is becoming. The renovations began out of necessity, he explained. Both buildings were showing their age â they are each more than 70 years old â and the staff, now approaching 80, was no longer able to fit in the one building used as a chancery. Additionally, said Rasool, the 2008 recession and housing market crash provided South Africa with a good opportunity to purchase new properties â new homes for the ambassador and deputy chief of mission â and invest in an overhaul of its buildings. But as his predecessor, Ambassador Barbara Masekela, began the work of planning and overseeing the work, a broader plan of using the buildings to convey a larger message about South Africa was hatched. âTrue to the South African metaphor occasioned by Mr. [Nelson] Mandela when he was released from prison, the theme of reconciling I think is the resonant one,â said Rasool, who has served in Washington since 2010. âFor one, it is not a simple abandonment of everything that is old, so just like weâre building the new South Africa of foundations which are there despite our history, our renovation will continue to reflect the historical beauty of the two existing buildings. However, we will give it an entirely new content inside.â More than a modern interior, though, the new embassyâs most striking â and contrasting â addition will be a glass-and-steel atrium that will connect the two buildings. The atrium will be used for cultural functions and exhibitions and, as Rasool tells it, best exemplifies the attempt to use the renovated embassy to convey the message that South Africa is both traditional and modern. âThe most important aesthetical statement is that resting on the two historically old buildings is a post-modern atrium, all of steel and glass, that will not only expand the two [buildings] but rest on the two. That will, in an exterior sense, reflect the aspiration of our people, and I think the sum total is that we are historically rooted but we are
Photo: Davis Brody Bond / Turner Construction Co.
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Up until now, we have been entirely housed in a beautiful, historic set of buildings â but nothing that speaks about the new aspirations of our nation and how we represent that architecturally. â Ebrahim Rasool
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ambassador of South Africa to the United States
able to almost transcend it in post-modern ways by remaining on firm old foundations but with completely with new, modern vistas opening up for us,â he said. Those new vistas surrounding the 58,000-square-foot property will also include the figure of South Africaâs most revered leader, Nelson Mandela. Once the renovations are done, said Rasool, a 10-foot statue of the former president and Nobel Peace Prize winner will be placed in front of the embassy. But like the atrium itself, the statueâs placement will be symbolic in its own right â it will stand outside the embassyâs gates, a nod to Mandelaâs emergence from prison in 1990 after 27 years of captivity. âThis represents Nelson Mandelaâs first step out of prison.That, if anything, [is] the contribution to that work of my generation here in the mission. So we are adding a wonderful addition to the memorials that adorn the Washington skyline,â said Rasool, himself an anti-apartheid activist who first Mandela while he was detained for his activism (also see Rasoolâs cover profile, âSouth Africa Comes of Age,â in the February 2012 issue of The Washington Diplomat). Created by South African sculptor Jean Doyle, the statue â the first of Mandela in the United States â will join those of Martin Luther King Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi (outside the Indian Embassy) in what Rasool calls the âgolden
July 2013
South Africaâs renovated 58,000-square-foot chancery and residence on Massachusetts Avenue â done by architect Davis Brody Bond and Turner Construction Co. â will feature a glass-and-steel atrium that will connect the two buildings.
triangle of peace heroes.â It will also be placed slightly offcenter relative to the embassy itself, close to a point around which anti-apartheid protests in D.C. swirled during the 1980s. âNelson Mandelaâs statue tribute there will be a tribute to all of them,â said Rasool. The renovations â designed by architect Davis Brody Bond and implemented by Turner Construction Co. â should be completed by July, and Rasool plans an opening ceremony in September. âItâs going to be the culminaÂÂtion and the high point of our diplomacy in the U.S.A.,â he said. Along with the positive public diplomacy that came from South Africa hosting the 2010 World Cup, he noted, the new embassy and the Mandela statue will help further develop the strong relationship between Washington and Pretoria. âI think itâs really a tribute to the burgeoning relationship between South Africa and the United States that our staff has grown,â he said. âI think that itâs really amazing that we are now in a position to occupy two buildings of substance.â As for the bilateral relationship itself, Rasool says that while the two countries share many values, he has had to navigate some occasional differences. âFrom a values perspective, we [are] completely aligned. I think we often had tactical differences. How would you bring a resolution in Libya? How would you manage Sudan? How would you manage Zimbabwe? I think we differed on tactics, and I think my job over these past two and a half years has been to keep everyone focused on the commonality of values so that the tactical disagreements donât unravel a strong bilateral relationship,â he said. âI think that weâve by and large kept that relationship afloat very, very strongly.â
Martin Austermuhle is a contributing writer for The Washington Diplomat. The Washington Diplomat Page 25