Wescape: thriving new city or failed development?
Controversy surrounds huge West Coast project
The City of Cape Town has approved the creation of a new city of 800,000 people in 200,000 homes, 20 kilometres from Cape Town up the west coast. But many questions about the controversial new development remain unanswered. In the first in a three part series, GroundUp asks: will Wescape succeed?
Read part two: Who will finance the new city?
Read part three:Â 800,000 people in Koebergâs nuclear “red” zone?
The proposed Wescape development, more than 20km from the city centre, was first announced in 2012. In 2013, the developers overcame their first hurdle and secured the approval of the amendment by the Western Cape government to the urban edge.
Gita Goven, chairperson of communiTgrow, the developer of the project, says construction could begin as soon as next year, but ârealisticallyâ, 2019 or 2020 will be when âthe spades hit the groundâ.
CommuniTgrow is currently preparing an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) application, and securing finance for the project.
The vision for the privately funded Wescape is a city of about 800,000 people in 200,000 homes, over 400 schools and a university, over 90 community facilities. It is expected to offer about 300 000 jobs. The development is set to be carried out over 20 years.
Why a new city and why over 20km from the city centre?
For communiTgrow, Wescape makes sense against the backdrop of high levels of urbanisation, an enormous housing backlog and a spatially segregated city.
By 2031, communiTgrow (citing the Cityâs own data) expects Cape Town to have grown to 5.8 million people (up from 3.7 million in the 2011 census), although a UN estimate puts the number at 4.3 million people in 2030. CommuniTgrow also cites a 400,000 household housing backlog, a number that the City has also put forward. Again, this has been disputed, with other estimates being much lower, but the argument between those in favour and those against the Wescape development does not hinge on the figures, but on the choice of expansion rather than densification.
Goven agrees that densification is necessary. But she points to the high cost of purchasing land in the city centre and the lengthy application processes that are needed for each development in the city.
âI have been involved in low income developmental programmes and projects for 30 years, and in all that time it has been very difficult to unlock any of the larger sites in a way that is affordable to people who really need the housing,â she says.
The Cityâs own Built Environment Performance Plan 2014/15 emphasises the need to acquire large parcels of privately owned land in growth corridors to solve an impending shortage of public land.
Goven believes that it is âvirtually impossibleâ to undo the âdeeply spatially segregated structured cityâ that is Cape Town, and that coupled with this Cape Town has an âagingâ and âstretchedâ infrastructure.
âSo the extension of the urban edge into areas where the land prices are not so high offers the possibility to blend a range of income streams, so one can begin to deal with the vision for a city extension that actually has a better demographic mix, a cultural and social mix.â
Nancy Odendaal, who is senior lecturer in City Planning at the University of Cape Town and works with the African Centre for Cities, disagrees with Goven.
âI recognise that infill development and densification are difficult to achieve, but frankly, it can be done,â says Odendaal.
She says that she âunderstands the frustrationâ in making densification work but that she believes that âyou cannot create a new city and put people in the middle of nowhere just because it is too difficult to do infill developmentâ.
Gavin Silber, who is a researcher at Ndifuna Ukwazi and has a masterâs degree in urban planning, is also adamant that densification of the city is the answer â not the development of Wescape.
âWe should be looking at densifying the inner-city and surrounds and encouraging mixed-income integrated neighbourhoods by scaling up government subsidised rental stock, and strengthening regulation of the private market through policy instruments including rent controls and other mechanisms to protect tenants. Developments in more affluent areas should also be compelled to set a portion of new complexes aside for affordable housing. These are not pipe dreams â they are implemented widely across the world.â
Silber believes that an alternative to Wescape is to develop public land for housing on sites such as District Six, Culemborg and Youngsfield.
âUnfortunately, this land has historically been left undeveloped or sold to private developers, rather than being used to advance service delivery objectives as mandated by law.â
How will Wescape be developed?
Wescape is set to be developed in phases and at the beginning it will be driven by the construction industry. âThis is not a housing project, this is basically an economic development project,â states Goven â a statement that Odendaal rubbishes, saying that the project is indeed a housing project regardless of claims to the otherwise.
On Wescapeâs website they explain that the âattendant opportunity is the subsequent clustering around the construction industry and the magnets / attractors which create a multiplier effect that in turn establishes a full array of sustainable economic activities over the life of the building projectâ.
Goven says in terms of this model, businesses and schools will be attracted to Wescape to meet the needs of those employed in construction.
âYou actually begin to create the right relationship, the right market attractors and the magnets so that investors want to be there. In turn that grows the kind of demand level. So the things aggregate,â says Goven.
The aim is to start with a small community so that the first inhabitants of Wescape do not have to travel in from Cape Town for work.
Odendaal says that while communiTgrowâs vision has âan element of truthâ in it, it contains major weaknesses. Many of the jobs created during construction are temporary jobs, she says; and there is doubt about how many will become permanent jobs. The economic argument is flawed, she says.
âYou canât build a city overnight,â says Odendaal, explaining that even with the best location and a large amount of funding and resources, creating a city is difficult.
Silber too questions this process.
âWhat types of industries will move there?â he asks. âWescape’s architects have been very vague on this â yet the entire plan pivots on pulling this off successfully. It is incredibly difficult to build and sustain economic activity in a remote area.â
âWescape is alluring to some public officials because it appears to be a silver bullet in addressing Cape Town’s housing backlog almost in its entirety. But most informed civil servants agree that Wescape would be disastrous.â
In researcher Liza Rose Ciroliaâs paper on â(W)Escaping the challenges of the City: A critique of Cape Townâs proposed satellite townâ she writes that a âcomplex set of factorsâ impact on industry and these âcannot be factored into a master planned designâ.
âPast evidence from the case of Atlantis and more recent interviews with representatives of local industry in Cape Town suggest that industry does not follow cheap land.â
She argues that Wescapeâs proposal is âdeeply flawedâ and tries to âescape rather than confront the operational, political and social challenges of the cityâ.
Rob McGaffin, who is a town planner and land economist, believes that the model that communiTgrow proposes where schools, businesses and industry will naturally develop in Wescape, is a âvery simplisticâ and ânaĂŻve modelâ.
âHumans donât actually operate like that, we donât use everything that is immediately available to us⌠We donât live in self-contained communities,â he says.
Like Odendaal, he sees development within the city as the answer to the problems that Cape Town faces, but he says that these developments are often prevented by prospective neighbours who take on a ânot in my backyardâ approach to lower income developments in their neighbourhoods.
Who will live in Wescape?
Wescape is designed for a range of housing and income brackets. A total of about 200,000 houses are to be built with about half as affordable housing.
Goven says there is âan open invitationâ for people to move to Wescape. She says communiTgrow has spoken to people about Wescape and the desire for such a project has been âoverwhelmingâ.
âPeople have actually been calling in and saying when can we sign up on the housing? Thatâs how excited they are.â
Silber wonders whether Goven herself would move to Wescape. âIt is incredibly unlikely that people who can afford to live closer to the city would willingly choose to move 30km away from it. It is quite possible that Wescape will become the most isolated and segregated settlement in the country,â he says.
McGaffin asks how Wescape will attract middle class residents or those in the affordable housing market. In the end, he says, the residents of Wescape will be those who have no choice but to move there as that is where their subsidised homes will be.
The City of Cape Town declined to respond to questions from GroundUp, saying that the EIA had yet to be lodged.
Letters
Dear Editor
The journalist mentions that the City has âapprovedâ this development.
This is despite the journalist being told on 12 April 2016 in a response: âThe City has not received any rezoning application nor is it aware of any environmental impact assessment (EIA) application having been lodged with the Western Cape Governmentâs Department of Environmental Management and Development Planning relating to this proposal. As such, the City does not have any information to respond to your questions.â
We received no further enquiries from the journalist in this regard but the article that was published on 31 May 2016 creates an entirely different impression.
For the record, it must be noted that the City of Cape Town has not approved any application for development rights for the so-called Wescape development.
In fact, to date the City has not received any rezoning application nor is it aware of any EIA application having been lodged with the Western Cape Governmentâs Department of Environmental Management and Development Planning relating to this proposal.
The article correctly points out that more than two years ago the Western Cape Government approved an amendment to the Cityâs Spatial Development Framework (SDF) under the erstwhile Land Use Planning Ordinance (LUPO) planning legislation. An SDF does not confer or take away any development rights â but the amendment to the SDFâs urban edge simply makes it possible for a land owner to apply for development rights. This has not been done and no application has been submitted for the City to apply its mind.
Should an application be submitted in future, there will be extensive public participation as is prescribed both in terms on the Municipal Planning By-law as well as the National Environmental Management Act.
GroundUp Editor's Response
The City of Cape Town has not yet been invited to approve a formal application for development rights. However, on the recommendation of its Economic, Environmental and Spatial Planning Portfolio Committee, the City Council in December 2012 resolved to support the Wescape developers' application to the Western Cape government to extend the urban edge to accommodate the project. See the minutes of that Council meeting at
https://www.capetown.gov.za/en/CouncilOnline/Pages/ViewCouncilMeetingDetails.aspx?RecurrenceId=10396
In addition, Mayor Patricia de Lille has been quoted as being "excited" about the Wescape project which she has said will bring opportunities to the area:
http://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/western-cape/cape-town-plans-new-mini-city-1486813
http://www.theprojectmanager.co.za/articles/wescape-mini-city-5216.html
Dear Editor
Interesting that the developers quote estimated times to the CBD from Wescape as being "26 minutes".
This assumes home owners will travel to the CBD for work, and further is based on traffic patterns as they are at the moment.
Truth is that Wescape will cause major congestion on the N7 inbound. We saw how developments such as Parklands and Burgundy Estate influenced congestion. Cape Town already has a reputation as having the worst traffic in the country - Wescape will most certainly exacerbate the situation.
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