Sunday Times

Dusty Diepsloot gets a megabuck makeover

- ISAAC MAHLANGU

THERE is a buzz in Diepsloot, one of Johannesbu­rg’s most overcrowde­d townships.

A multimilli­on-rand police station has been built, various cycling lanes have sprung up, as have tarred roads, and two pedestrian bridges connecting different sections of the township are on the verge of completion.

Residents are finally starting to believe that Diepsloot is getting a long-overdue makeover.

The rapid transforma­tion is due to a combinatio­n of projects — more than 20, costing billions of rands — being undertaken at once by the national and provin- cial government­s and the City of Johannesbu­rg.

Among these is a plan to build 17 000 new homes.

Diepsloot councillor Rogers Makhubele said the building of the first houses in the new Diepsloot south area was expected to start shortly.

“What took much of the time was the installati­on of the undergroun­d infrastruc­ture. The environmen­tal impact assessment studies also took longer than what was initially anticipate­d,” he said.

The cycling lanes have, however, become an extension of pedestrian walkways in the busy streets of the buzzing township.

Cyclist Thabiso Matsekolen­g, 27, used the bicycle lane for the first time this week, because he had not known the route was open to him.

“We weren’t told that the lane was for cyclists,” he said. “Besides, it always has lots of pedestrian­s using it at any given time of the day.”

Matsekolen­g said it was “refreshing” to see so much developmen­t in Diepsloot, which had been an “ignored informal settlement” for years.

Johannesbu­rg mayor Parks Tau said this week that Diepsloot was “a critical area for developmen­t” in the city.

“Diepsloot is now 21 years old and it started as an informal settlement. We are developing it into a habitable area to live in.”

Tau said the next phase of the multibilli­on-rand Rea Vaya bus rapid transit system would be rolled out to link Randburg, Fourways and Diepsloot to the north of the city.

Makhubele said some locals were sceptical, but generally people were excited about the developmen­ts.

“Diepsloot has a huge population, so you get people who are worried that they may not benefit from the houses which are being built,” he said.

With a population of 130 000, Diepsloot has one of the highest densities in Johannesbu­rg with 11 532 people per km², according to Census 2011.

 ?? Picture: SIMPHIWE NKWALI ?? WHEELS OF FORTUNE: Diepsloot resident Thabiso Matsekolen­g, 27, uses the revitalise­d township’s new cycling lanes for the first time
Picture: SIMPHIWE NKWALI WHEELS OF FORTUNE: Diepsloot resident Thabiso Matsekolen­g, 27, uses the revitalise­d township’s new cycling lanes for the first time

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