The Chancellor House in Fox Street, central Johannesburg
The refurbished Chancellor House, where former  president Nelson Mandela and Oliver Tambo had their law office in  Johannesburg in the 1950s, was unveiled on Wednesday. 
                                                           Nelson Mandela - 1950's
“If bricks could talk this  building would have been replete with  colourful stories about the  struggles for national liberation,” said Johannesburg mayor Amos  Masondo. 
Johannesburg mayor Amos  Masondo.
The building, which was dilapidated prior to the renovation project, was refurbished by the Johannesburg Development Agency at a cost of R5 million.
In 1952, Mandela and Tambo started  the first black-owned law firm in Johannesburg, where free or low-cost  legal services were offered to black South Africans. 
Masondo quoted 'Long Walk to Freedom' to illustrate the significance of the Mandela and Tambo law firm: 
“It was a place where they (the  black majority) could come and find a sympathetic ear and a competent  ally, a place where they would not be either turned away or cheated, a  place where they might actually feel proud to be represented by men of  their own skin colour.” 
Masondo  said that the building had housed discussions central to  the  organisation of the Defiance Campaigns and preparations for the  Treason  Trials, and as such had shaped South Africa's liberation struggle  history. 
The law firm closed down in 1960  owing to their political careers and pressure from the apartheid regime  and the building gradually fell into disrepair. 
The building was saved from demolition when it became a provisional national monument in 1999. 
The building would house a museum and archive of the historic work of Mandela and Tambo, Masondo said.
 










