The Civil Engineering Contractor January 2019 | Page 13

CONTRACTORS ON SITE The R130-million Go!Durban C9 Corridor, work package 2B: Ward 49 – Phoenix Highway upgrade from Lenham Drive to Hannaford Drive, in Phoenix, Durban (KwaZulu- Natal), is at the tender stage. This comes after residents, ratepayers, and business owners of wards 49 and 50 in Phoenix attended a public meeting to discuss the implementation and construction of Go!Durban. Go!Durban is the eThekwini Metropolitan Municipality’s Integrated Rapid Public Transport Network (IRPTN) aimed at creating a safer, more efficient, and affordable commuter experience for all citizens of eThekwini. The city hopes to ensure that 85% of all residents will have access to safe, affordable, and quality scheduled public transport. It hopes to provide opportunities for densification, mixed-use, and transit-orientated development, to reduce the need for Swaziland to Mpumalanga, SA’s new rail link Durban aims to develop a more efficient public transport system. travel, promote the emergence of a world-class city, and to inspire a wave of architectural renewal, which will result in urban rejuvenation and revitalisation of run-down areas. Through the large-scale nature of the project and the timelines, it will also create jobs and assist in the alleviation of poverty in the province. nn The bulk of the funds will go towards infrastructure and construction. Progress has been made, as the purchasing of the 506ha of land required on the South African side for this project has been approved. Negotiations with the land owners are being finalised to purchase the impacted land. Authorities in South Africa and Swaziland have granted both teams with the necessary environmental permits. Additionally, authorities in South Africa and Swaziland have granted the water use licenses, while the feasibility studies of the existing lines that need to be upgraded are in progress. The lines are Ermelo to Lothair as well as Golela to Nsese. Plans to resettle the affected households are also in progress. By relieving the corridor of almost all its general freight, Transnet would align the rail network with the coal- handling capacity that exists at Richards Bay, in a bid to facilitate an increase in exports, initially from the country’s Mpumalanga coal mines, but progressively from the Waterberg, in Limpopo, and eventually also from neighbouring Botswana. nn Transnet plans to build a 146km railway line from Sidvokodvo in Swaziland to Lothair in Mpumalanga. Work was currently under way to package the project for presentation to private investors. The feasibility phase has been completed and the project is ready to be packaged to take to the market to look at public-private partnerships (PPP). Transnet and Swaziland Railways have agreed to package the project as a PPP and may release an international tender for a 20–25-year concession. The project, estimated to cost R17-billion, is the biggest collaborative infrastructure development between the two countries. The new line will create an additional capacity of 15-million tonnes of coal. It is also aligned to the larger North-South Corridor proposal to link the regional economies of southern Africa and further complement the existing coal feeder system and other bulk mineral corridors. Go!Durban: Phoenix Highway upgrade Linking Swazi coal to the world. www.civilsonline.co.za CEC January 2019 | 11