Tafelberg study a breakthrough‚ say activists

19 November 2016 - 19:02 By Ashleigh Furlong

According to the Western Cape government‚ 270 residential rental units for households earning under R7‚500 a month could be built on the old Tafelberg school site. This is according to the government’s feasibility study on affordable housing for the site released on Friday.The release of the study comes after housing activist organisation Ndifuna Ukwazi had a sit-in at the provincial public works department earlier this week‚ demanding that the study be published.According to the study‚ tenants could rent one of the 270 units for R1‚000 to R2‚300 a month. Of these units‚ 30% would be for families earning less than R3‚500 a month and 70% would be for those earning between R3‚500 and R7‚500 a month.The development would include commercial‚ retail and community facilities. The possibility of keeping the existing school building as a school is also proposed. There is also the possibility of refurbishing the Wynyard Mansions apartment block that is on the property. These units would not be part of the affordable housing component. Jared Rossouw‚ the director of Ndifuna Ukwazi‚ called the study a “breakthrough model” that “brings the province to the brink of an unprecedented decision: to begin dismantling apartheid spatial design in Cape Town.”“It looks like a substantial commitment towards building the first new affordable housing in the inner-city since the end of apartheid‚” said Rossouw.In the model‚ money for the project would come in the form of the Social Housing Regulatory Authority restructuring grant and the Institutional Housing subsidy‚ totalling just over R71million. The Western Cape government would need to give just over R9 million as an equity contribution to make the social housing model viable.The total construction costs are estimated at around R113 million‚ with a bit more than R40 million expected to be made in sales of retail and community facilities. The earnings from rental of residential units minus operating costs and bad debt considerations is estimated at about R50 million.Using this model‚ an approximately 14% return on the project before tax is expected.Property giant plans ‘iconic building’ on Foreshore‚ but NPO says land should be used for affordable housingCape Town city centre's will get a new landmark building after an R86.5-million land auction‚ say the new owners. The study comes after a long running battle over the site. Housing activists were fiercely opposed to the province selling the site to Phyllis Jowell Jewish Day School for R135 million‚ instead of building affordable housing.Ndifuna Ukwazi took the Western Cape government to court in an attempt to halt the sale. In court‚ an agreement was reached whereby the public was able to submit comment on the Tafelberg site for an extended period.The feasibility study comes following a cabinet resolution taken in August this year that called for financial modelling to be done.Rossouw believes that in light of this model‚ “it is untenable for province to sell Tafelberg off to a private entity”.“We anticipate that this financial model will face objections and dissent from powerful interests in Cape Town — most notably from private developers who have profit-driven agendas for our public land and many wealthy residents who do not want to live alongside poor‚ black people‚” said Rossouw.Despite this‚ he sees this as an opportunity for Premier Helen Zille to “plot a steady course to fulfil her commitment towards a more inclusive Cape Town and Western Cape Province”.'Victory' in Sea Point housing projectIn what has been hailed as a victory for black and coloured people who travel long distances to work, the Western Cape provincial government has said it will conduct a feasibility study on the introduction of affordable housing in Sea Point. * This article was originally published in GroundUp...

There’s never been a more important time to support independent media.

From World War 1 to present-day cosmopolitan South Africa and beyond, the Sunday Times has been a pillar in covering the stories that matter to you.

For just R80 you can become a premium member (digital access) and support a publication that has played an important political and social role in South Africa for over a century of Sundays. You can cancel anytime.

Already subscribed? Sign in below.



Questions or problems? Email helpdesk@timeslive.co.za or call 0860 52 52 00.