North Beach in Durban during the 1980s was a vibrant part of the city’s famous Golden Mile beachfront — a classic South African holiday destination full of sun, surf, and nostalgia for many locals and visitors.
What it was like in the 80s
- The vibe: Busy family beach with lots of holidaymakers, especially during school holidays (July and December). People remember it as safe, bustling, and fun — with swimming, sunbathing, and promenade walks. It was a hub for locals and tourists staying in nearby hotels like the Malibu, Four Seasons, or others along Marine Parade/Snell Parade.
- Key landmarks:
- Durban Surf Lifesaving Club clubhouse (still prominent today).
- Beach Baths (municipal swimming pools right by the beach).
- Drive-in tearooms like The Nest, Cuban Hat, and earlier spots like Uptons or XL Tearoom — classic spots for ice cream, pies, or bunny chow served on car trays.
- Nearby attractions: Miniature golf (putt-putt), amusement areas, and the broader Golden Mile with its hotels, restaurants, and sea views.
- Context: Early in the decade, beaches were still racially segregated under apartheid (North Beach became one of the first to open to all races around the early-mid 80s). By the late 80s, it was more mixed.
Many people who grew up in that era recall it fondly as “the Durban I remember” — evening walks on the promenade, staying in beachfront hotels, and the general holiday buzz. A lot of nostalgia posts mention how different (and often better-maintained) the area felt compared to later decades.
Visuals & Atmosphere
Imagine wide sandy beaches, the warm Indian Ocean, colourful umbrellas, rickshaws on the promenade, 80s fashion (bright swimsuits, big hair), and the iconic Durban skyline of high-rise hotels. The North Pier and groyne helped create calmer swimming areas.
There are great archival videos and photo collections online:
- YouTube montages of the Golden Mile showing 70s–90s footage (hotels, beaches, and crowds).
- Facebook groups like Durban history ones full of scanned 80s holiday snaps.
- Old postcards and Getty Images archives for professional shots.


