Plant Equipment and Hire October 2019 | Page 41

INSIGHT WHY ALL THE CRANES? If it’s all doom and gloom, why are there so many cranes on the skyline, asks Patrick McInerney. Those hard-working cranes Part of the reason for the abovementioned cranes is the enormous property boom in the central nodes. Many new A-grade www.equipmentandhire.co.za buildings are coming on stream and being filled by tenants previously in B-grade buildings. So, there’s now an oversupply of B-grade property and, because of all the new projects, an oversupply of A-grade as well. But it is part of the natural cycle of the industry and not the harbinger of its imminent doom. Those empty B grade spaces represent a massive opportunity for the future. Water and energy scarcity solutions The fact that South Africa effectively ran out of water in 2016 and that around 41% of water is lost due to bad infrastructure is obviously concerning. So too is the reality that obtaining water usage licences for new developments is now far harder than it has ever been. But the good news is that solving the water scarcity problem has been declared the number one priority for Government. Cape Town, after staring down the barrel of its own Day Zero in early 2018, has made tremendous strides in water conservation. Rand Water recently carried out a major water infrastructure upgrade in Gauteng, which, despite howls of protest from the public and media because of the required shutdown of services, is a definite positive. Going forward, successful building developments will require that water and energy consumption be reduced and, as far as possible, buildings contribute to energy generation, and water be collected and reused. The technology already exists to achieve this. At Co-Arc International Architects, for example, a major project we successfully completed in Accra - Ghana required that we not only conserve the limited water supply, but reuse and augment it to the point where we achieved a 76% saving in water consumption. The same project had 60% savings in net energy I came away from the recent 2019 SAPOA Convention feeling depressed about the range of the discussion regarding the property industry and the economy in general. If things really are so bad, why are a record number of building cranes adorning our city skylines, why are we not celebrating the successes? This year’s SAPOA Convention was probably the most downbeat that I’ve attended in my many years in the building industry. The majority of speakers gave us bad news – ranging from water scarcity problems through to concerns about the oversupply of property, the industry’s talent drain and government’s lack of policy certainty. I know I wasn’t the only attendee to come away disheartened. It’s feasible that some negativity was orchestrated to send government a message. But there were probably people who decided to leave South Africa based on what they were told in that conference room. As I pondered what I’d heard, I realised that all this negativity is ridiculous! Why, I asked myself, if things are so bad, do we have a record number of building cranes operating in places such as Sandton, Rosebank and Cape Town? How, if the building industry is on the brink of implosion as some would have us believe, is it possible to have more cranes working on construction projects than at any time since the 1960s? Have we got less policy certainty than in 1994? I am certainly not one to put my head in the sand as to the problems we’re facing as an industry. But I believe we’re in danger of creating a self-fulfilling prophecy by ignoring the many positives and talking ourselves into a self-created downturn. Patrick McInerney, Director of Co-Arc International Architects. “I am certainly not one to put my head in the sand as to the problems we’re facing as an industry. But I believe we’re in danger of creating a self- fulfilling prophecy by ignoring the many positives and talking ourselves into a self- created downturn.” OCTOBER 2019 39