There is a Nelson Mandela quote that has never grown old: “There is no passion to be found playing small — in settling for a life that is less than the one you are capable of living.” Johannesburg has never been a city that plays small. It is a city of gold and grit, of sunrise skylines and soul, of a million stories stitched together into one thundering, breathing, improbable human tapestry. And this Sunday, 21 July, that city is asking something quietly powerful of you: come back to its streets.

Main Street Sundays is not merely an event. It is a love letter, written in tarmac and music, in laughter and skate wheels, in the golden haze of a Highveld winter morning and the smell of South African coffee lifting into cold, bright air. It is a reclamation – of space, of civic pride, of the particular joy that comes from standing in the middle of a city you call home and feeling it pulse beneath your feet.

The city that rediscovers itself

Across the world, cities that have turned their inner streets back over to people – closing them to traffic, filling them with life – have witnessed something remarkable happen. Foot traffic surges. Commerce blooms. But more than economics, something harder to measure and infinitely more precious occurs: residents fall back in love with the city they call home.

Studies from the UK have shown trading increases of up to 40% in pedestrianised areas. In New York, the creation of pedestrian plazas in Times Square reduced injuries, increased foot traffic and sparked measurable economic growth, while commercial vacancies in pedestrianised zones dropped by 49%. A global survey spanning 68 countries found that 87% of residents ranked access to good public space as essential to their wellbeing. In Pontevedra, Spain, pedestrianising the city centre led not only to near-zero traffic fatalities, but to a renaissance of community identity that made headlines across Europe. The data, gathered from Jakarta to Minneapolis, from Johannesburg to Berlin, tells the same story: when you give a street back to its people, the people give their hearts back to their city.

Dawn Robertson, Visitor & Creative Economy Catalyst at Jozi My Jozi, understands this in her bones.

“Main Street Sundays is about restoring Johannesburg’s soul,” she says. “When we close the streets to cars and open them to community – to families, to artists, to cyclists and skaters, to vendors – we remind people that this city is theirs. It always has been. We want every Joburger who walks down that street on Sunday to feel something shift inside them. To remember why they fell in love with this city in the first place.”

Robertson is emphatic about the safety and accessibility that families can expect on 21 July. “This is a Sunday for everyone,” she says. “Parents can bring their children, grandparents can walk without fear, visitors can explore without hesitation. We have created a space where the full spectrum of Johannesburg comes together – not separated by suburb or circumstance, but united by one street, one city, one Sunday. Come and feel what this city is truly capable of.”

The street itself will be transformed into a living canvas of experience. Dedicated lanes will invite cyclists, roller-skaters, and skateboarders of every level to move freely through the city, while safe, interactive play areas created in partnership with Play Africa give children a Sunday morning they won’t forget. A walkable art mile, beginning near the Standard Bank Gallery, threads through live sidewalk exhibitions that turn the pavement into a gallery without walls. Those seeking stillness will find it too – in silent book clubs, outdoor yoga sessions, light fitness, and the unhurried gift of acoustic music drifting through winter air. And when hunger calls, the CBD’s own eateries and craft vendors will be ready, with open-air spots to sit, picnic, and pour money back into the heart of the city that is hosting you. 

Born of the streets

There are brands built in boardrooms, and there are brands born on streets. Crispy Skateboards belong entirely to the latter category. Conceived and raised in Johannesburg, Crispy carries in its DNA the exact texture of this city – its rawness, its creativity, its refusal to be anything less than itself. And on 21 July, Crispy will bring that energy home, setting up a skate stand together with BOS Iced Tea setting on Main Street complete with a grind box and a kicker, inviting skaters to do what they have always done in Jozi: claim the concrete, express the soul, make something beautiful out of hard surfaces.

Kaelik Dullaart, CEO of Crispy Skateboards, speaks about the day with the quiet intensity of someone who has always known that streets are cathedrals.

“Crispy was created from the love of the Joburg skate culture,” he says. “Every crack in the pavement, every kerb, every rail – that is our studio, our gallery, our home. When we heard about Main Street Sundays, we knew immediately that this was where we needed to be. To watch this city come alive in this way, culturally, authentically, with real people doing real things – that is what skating has always been about. We are not here to perform. We are here to feel the city breathe.”

Crispy’s stand will be a living invitation – boards on display and space for skaters of every age and level to roll, grind, and fly. It is Johannesburg street culture made visible, made accessible, made joyful.

A cold one for a warm city

Alongside Crispy, BOS – South Africa’s most beloved iced tea, will be supporting this day of connection with some vibrant energy and cold refreshments. Made with one of the Cape’s most iconic botanicals, BOS Ice Tea is as proudly, defiantly South African as the Cederberg mountains from which its rooibos is harvested. It is the taste of this country in a can, and it belongs on a day like this.

For BOS Ice Tea CEO Will Battersby, the day is about celebrating SA’s rich mosaic of cultures. “When we are part of something like Main Street Sundays, we are saying: this country is extraordinary, these people are extraordinary, and we are honoured to be part of the story they are telling together. Every BOS product is made from this soil. It makes complete sense that we pour it on streets that belong to the people who love that soil most.”

What awaits you on 21 July

The street will be alive. There will be music, there will be movement, there will be vendors and makers and wanderers. There will be children running where cars once idled. There will be skate wheels on smooth tarmac and the sound of a city that has remembered what it can be. Families will find safe, joyful space to simply be together in the heart of a great African city. Brands like Crispy and BOS – proudly South African, proudly rooted in the story of this place – will be there not as sponsors but as citizens.

Because that, ultimately, is what Main Street Sundays is asking of every brand and every person who answers its call: not consumption, but citizenship. Not attendance, but belonging.

Johannesburg has always been a city of extraordinary human capacity – a city that has survived and thrived and reinvented itself again and again, that has held within its streets the full complexity of what it means to be South African. On 21 July, for one golden Sunday, Main Street is asking you to come and stand in its centre. To look up at the buildings, feel the winter sun on your face, watch teens playing hopscotch, kids skipping rope, strangers square off in a game of giant chess, and remember something you may have almost forgotten.

This city is yours. It is calling you home.

Main Street Sundays takes place on 21 July in the Johannesburg CBD. Bring your family, your sense of adventure, and your love for the city.