SA Affordable Housing November - December 2018 // Issue: 73 | Page 24
FEATURES
buildings in the city such as deserted factories or office
buildings and re-purpose these into affordable housing
units, partnering with private developers on a customised
contract basis.
“The challenge with these is that many of these buildings
are also already illegally occupied and temporary relocation is
required which means more space is needed that we don’t
always have,” comments an official from City of Johannesburg.
On speaking with contractors, from an implementation point of
view the challenge comes through the fact that these buildings
need to be gutted and there are not always suitable solutions
available such as services and sanitation as the buildings were
not originally designed for living.
We may see a change in the dynamics of
sustainable affordable housing models,
the resources and infrastructure planning
and bringing the required opportunities
to the communities rather than the other
way around
Land reform, specifically related to expropriation without
compensation [which is still in the air at time of publishing],
has also recently had a major impact for developers and
investors alike. “No one wants to invest this sort of money
we talk about in developments that essentially go into the
hundreds of millions of rands, only to be faced with
uncertain outcomes. “For any businessperson, management
of risk is vital but when you don’t know what risk you are
trying to manage the water become cloudy and this is never
a good outlook no matter how suitable your development is
to sustainable living,” another source comments.
Infrastructure, as already alluded to, is another major source
of concern as although there has been zero movement in the
last year, people are still flocking to the cities. This not only
leads to the overloading of road networks but puts
increasing pressure on electricity supply as well as the
life-giving resource of water.
“Sewerage systems and wastewater treatment facilities
are also either stressed or non-existent and also cause
backlogs with delivery of homes to the people, particularly
in newly developed areas even alongside existing residential
areas,” a wet services engineer says. “As an example of this
our units are all complete and ready but we are still waiting
for the municipality to connect our development to the
sewerage system. We have even offered to get our own
professionals to do the work but they declined,” another
developer comments. This proves another major challenge
for developments that are complete but the infrastructure to
support is lagging.
On the positive side, government and the private sector
are working together to find appropriate solutions and are
regularly engaging with scholars, university professors and
international experts to create and evaluate case studies
for sustainable living. “We may see a change in the
dynamics of sustainable affordable housing models, the
resources and infrastructure planning and bringing the
required opportunities to the communities rather than the
other way around,” a professor says. We are also seeing a
very big drive in alternatives to bricks and mortar that now
open up further opportunities to solve the housing backlog
in a much shorter timeframe.
Location is but one small element of solving the
challenge and referring to an internet motivation – ‘if the
plan doesn’t work, change the plan but not your goal’. This
can be applied to any situation so perhaps thinking outside
of the box is what we need. The world can only progress with
creativity but let’s not ever forget about quality.
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Send
your Robertson:
article and high
resolution images to
Warren
[email protected][email protected] or call +27 (0) 11 579 4940 for more information.
or call +27 (0) 11 579 4940
CONTACT US:
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+27 (0) 861 727 663
www.SAAffordableHousing.co.za
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NOVEMBER - DECEMBER 2018
www.SAAffordableHousing.co.za