Future of the nearly 900 people living in Woodstock Hospital hangs in the balance

Cape Town Mayor commits to social housing but residents believe they will be kicked out

| By

The old Woodstock Hospital has been occupied since 2017. Archive photo: Ashraf Hendricks

  • On Thursday, the City of Cape Town Council approved a recommendation from the mayor to start a public participation process over the future of former Woodstock hospital, also named Cissie Gool House by its residents.
  • Cissie Gool House has been occupied by about 900 people from Reclaim the City since 2017, who have turned it into their home.
  • Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis said that the occupation had caused “crippling delays” in developing affordable housing on the property.

The Council of the City of Cape Town on Thursday decided to go ahead with a public participation process to release the old Woodstock Hospital site (named Cissie Gool House) for the development of affordable housing.

Cissie Gool House is currently home to about 900 people who occupied the former hospital in 2017 as part of the Reclaim the City affordable housing campaign. Over seven years, the building has become a home to its residents. Many ended up living in Cissie Gool House because they were evicted or displaced from their homes in Woodstock due to gentrification.

During the Council meeting, Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis said the property was “one of the biggest social housing opportunities” in the city and the former hospital would “take its place among the various inner city sites we have already released for social housing”.

“The frustrating fact of this particular property is that social housing would have already been in the construction phase by now, were it not for the major obstacle of the unlawful occupation of the site,” said Hill-Lewis.

“While our social housing goals have been stonewalled and delayed all the way by these challenges, today we take another step forward, by asking Council to approve a public participation process on the City’s intention to release the Woodstock Hospital land for affordable housing development,” said Hill-Lewis.

He said an estimated 500 homes, including both social and affordable housing units, would be made available.

Karen Hendricks, leader of Reclaim the City in Woodstock, who is a resident, said to GroundUp that the Council’s decision came as a “rude surprise”. “Cissie Gool House has provided a safe home and a refuge to almost 1,000 people who could’ve been rendered totally homeless,” she said.

“We didn’t just squat here. We repurposed the space and repaired the space,” said Hendricks. She also said that people who occupied the former Woodstock hospital in 2017 included those who could no longer afford rising rentals and were forced to move out of their homes, or had been evicted, and people from the peripheral areas in the Cape Flats who wanted to live close to the inner City.

The Western Cape High Court previously granted an order that allowed the City to conduct a survey of the residents.

During the council meeting on Thursday, GOOD councillor Axolile Notywala said that they were opposed to “any sale of land in Cape Town that will lead to more homelessness and landlessness”.

He said the mayor was asking councillors to support a recommendation “with no information or care about what will happen to the 864 individuals mentioned in it, who have lived there for seven years”.

“These are 864 human beings. These are mothers, fathers, grandmothers, grandfathers and children who live there. Surely, we must care. These are families,” said Notywala.

In response to this, Mayco Member for Human Settlements Carl Pophaim said: “We have been clear as a city that occupation and invasion is not a metric for qualification for a housing opportunity.” Pophaim added that the City must “do justice” to more than 400,000 people waiting for housing opportunities in other areas in the city. “Does that mean we’re not a caring city to those individuals? Are we not a caring city to other communities within the City of Cape Town?”

He said the City would continue to engage with those living in Cissie Gool House, but would not “be held ransom by anyone in the city for a housing opportunity because they’ve illegally occupied or illegally invaded land.”

He said the City was committed to driving the affordable housing agenda “declining fiscal economy and in face of budget cuts”.

TOPICS:  Housing Social Housing Series

Next:  Glencore urged to stop selling coal to Israel

Previous:  Philippi community welcomes temporary police station

Write a letter in response to this article

Letters

Dear Editor

Cissie Gool House residents are well organized. Regularising their tenancy will be good and this will set the standard for social housing in the City and in South Africa.

For far too long, government and its agencies build accommodation opportunities far from the formal economy.

As a penance for occupying the hospital, the City could look at ensuring that all young dependants in families attend school and pass matric and continue for higher education or technical training.

The Mayor highlights Cissie Gool House but what about the Tafelberg school site in Sea Point? Former Mayor Patricia de Lille also proposed accommodation opportunities in Durbanville. This was not for social housing but for the 'missing middle'. Why is it off the table?

Dear Editor

I've been on the housing database since 1996. I have consistently updated my details and collected information on housing opportunities from the city council over the years. I've applied for many different social housing programmes, even paying admin fees for application processes for those project builds.

Qualifying is a nightmare: I earn too little for a two-bedroom unit (just by a few hundred rands) but too much for a single-bedroom unit. This process stresses me out. I’ve been evicted due to the unaffordability of rent.

I moved to Woodstock Hospital after my eviction, where I've experienced what it’s like to live in a community of people facing similar housing struggles. They couldn’t keep up with high rents and were evicted. Our struggle is to be recognised as part of the community around us. We have created homes out of this space and rebuilt our lives. We desire housing that includes us—the working class who earn less than R10,000. The criteria for housing should not be so rigid that we can’t access it.

We invite the city to come and meet us at Cissie Gool House, the old Woodstock Hospital. Come and sit down with us to discuss the decisions you have made. Come and listen to our struggle for housing in the inner city, where we work. The city council is welcome to visit our space to see for themselves that we are ready to communicate our issues in an open discussion.

We also welcome the public to come view our home and see how we’ve invested our resources into creating a living space and building a home. Give us the chance to show that we are respectable citizens, not villains.

© 2024 GroundUp. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

You may republish this article, so long as you credit the authors and GroundUp, and do not change the text. Please include a link back to the original article.

We put an invisible pixel in the article so that we can count traffic to republishers. All analytics tools are solely on our servers. We do not give our logs to any third party. Logs are deleted after two weeks. We do not use any IP address identifying information except to count regional traffic. We are solely interested in counting hits, not tracking users. If you republish, please do not delete the invisible pixel.