The Herald (South Africa)

Bold plan to energise inner city

Harbour precinct key focus area of MBDA project

- Guy Rogers rogersg@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

THE Mandela Bay Developmen­t Agency (MBDA) is steaming ahead with a clutch of exciting projects aimed at upgrading Port Elizabeth’s harbour precinct, restoring heritage and making the metro more accessible to all.

The finishing touches are being put to a new walkway (R12-million), and the ruins of St Peter’s Church, sacred heart of Old South End, are being secured and opened up (R7-million).

The renovation of historic homes in Ellis Street should start soon (R3.2-million) and a stylish new pedestrian bridge (R1.6-million) is being planned.

The aim was to drive the social transforma­tion of the precinct, to create opportunit­ies for tourism and other enterprise­s and to link the whole to the green treasure of the Baakens River Valley, MBDA planning and developmen­t manager Dorelle Sapere said yesterday.

“Our vision is to develop an iconic, world-class ocean city showcasing its diversity of people, culture, heritage and environmen­t and that’s what our latest projects are all about.”

During a tour after her presentati­on, Sapere pointed out how the broad, paved walkway runs between the Old Post Office and the Transnet building, from the steps on the southeast side of Vuyisile Mini Square to the north bank of the Baakens.

It would be both a connecting thoroughfa­re and a platform for fun, art and education, she said.

“We see it as a creative space and will be calling soon for input from our artists.

“It will include several storeys of parking and will be lined with wild plum trees. The mini-amphitheat­re below the Baakens River Bridge will be turned into an open-air cinema.

“The existing tables with inlaid chessboard­s beneath the trees on Produce Street will be cleaned up and we’re hoping the chess societies will make good use of them.”

The walkway will flow into a promenade along the north bank of the river ending in a park that will highlight the five indigenous biomes, or broad eco-zones, of the Bay.

It will be planted with indigenous, drought-resistant vegetation and will allow children to connect with the environmen­t and especially the Baakens valley through various eco-games, she said.

Across in St Mary’s Cemetery, erosion around St Peter’s Church is being gunnited in preparatio­n for the developmen­t of a timber walkway which will wind through the graves, a mosaic of memory reflecting the rich cultural diversity of South End before the 1968-73 apartheid-forced removals.

A little higher up the valley, a tender has been approved for the renovation of the nine dilapidate­d Ellis Street homes, some of the last of the original South End houses.

The contractor is due to start work this month, with expected completion by the end of June.

The project is the start of a broader one to build a range of social, gap and first-time buyer housing on the north side of Upper Valley Road up to Webber Street.

The developmen­t would look to recreate the colourfuln­ess and community security of Old South End, Sapere said.

The MBDA is also in the last phase of planning a pedestrian bridge that will stretch over the Baakens River – just west of the Tramways to the new promenade.

The structure will be angled to avoid a build-up of debris and flood water will pass over it.

 ?? Pictures: WERNER HILLS ?? HISTORIC SITE: Excavation has started at the ruins of St Peter’s Church in South End
Pictures: WERNER HILLS HISTORIC SITE: Excavation has started at the ruins of St Peter’s Church in South End
 ??  ?? LAST OF SOUTH END: MBDA planning and developmen­t manager Dorelle Sapere and marketing and communicat­ions manager Luvuyo Bangazi at one of the homes in Ellis Street
LAST OF SOUTH END: MBDA planning and developmen­t manager Dorelle Sapere and marketing and communicat­ions manager Luvuyo Bangazi at one of the homes in Ellis Street

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