New Era

Monte Christo road relocation well on course

- Albertina Nakale

Windhoek mayor Fransina Kahungu says the relocation site - where communitie­s affected by the Goreangab and Monte Christo road developmen­t will be moved - has been identified and surveyed in Havana extension 9. “As we are speaking, road work is near completion.

The site is being surveyed and the communal services are to be installed before we can relocate people.

Overall, the progress is very good,” she told New Era yesterday. In February this year, the Windhoek city council resolved to relocate 256 households from the Monte Christo road reserve in Havana and a portion in Goreangab to pave way for the Ongos Valley Phase 1 developmen­t as well as the Goreangab Waterfront mixed developmen­t.

The households at Windhoek’s Havana informal settlement identified for relocation are directly affected by the expansion of Monte Christo road and the extension of Independen­ce Avenue, which will lead to the area where the envisaged township will be developed.

The council indicated Monte Christo road was critical to the developmen­t of Ongos Valley Phase 1, being the shortest and most practical access route and being the bulk service link for water and electricit­y supply to the developmen­t.

The developmen­ts include a township to be developed on Farm Ongos No. 38 – situated 13 kilometres from the Windhoek central business district west of the Nubuamis area – and a mixed residentia­l developmen­t by the Goreangab Waterfront Developmen­t.

Ongos Va l l e y developers plan to build about 28 000 housing units within a 15 to 20 years period at a projected cost of N$20 billion.

The Goreangab Waterfront Developmen­t has a l re ady st ar t ed constructi­onwithmost houses up for sale. On Ongos road upgrade, which includes the Matshitshi and Monte Christo road, she said such road work has commenced and is progressin­g well.

“This also includes the preparatio­n of the relocation site. The negotiatio­ns with the affected people have started. Some of these households are on the way for road constructi­on, while others are in the way for the formal market site. We plan to build a formal market as there are many informal traders in Havana and Goreangab,” she maintained.

Kahungu warned those instigatin­g the affected residents facing relocation not to move.

These instigator­s are allegedly telling the affected people that once the y move, they will lose their cus tome rs for their small to medium businesses. Another progress she mentioned is the expansion of Independen­ce Avenue and Otjomuise road.

She reported 50% of the work is completed and the developers applied to take over that portion of the road as it lies within their developmen­t. “The City of Windhoek is waiting for the developers’ engineers to submit a quality assurance manual for auditing purposes. After section 1 is finished, then section 2 will follow.

She clarified that these road works are not at the cost of the City of Windhoek but will be funded by the two developers. -anakale@nepc.com. na

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