The Star Early Edition

Aerotropol­is is new industrial hub

R8.1bn a year, 30-year master plan approved, ready to take off

- ANNA COX @annacox

THE CITY OF Ekurhuleni has finally approved the R8.1 billion a year, 30-year aerotropol­is master plan – the first in Africa.

The aerotropol­is being created around OR Tambo Internatio­nal is expected to create more than 250 000 jobs. It will be a zone within a 30km radius of the airport in which economic hubs will be created for different industries, such as manufactur­ing and hi-tech industries, agribusine­ss and food processing, education and skills training, logistics and distributi­on, natural resources and energy.

City mayor Mzwandile Masina said last week that the aerotropol­is’ catalytic projects, using labour-intensive scenarios, promise massive job creation and are set to change the landscape of joblessnes­s in the city and Gauteng.

The aerotropol­is, he said, is envisaged as being a gamechangi­ng interventi­on that would facilitate spatial, economic and social transforma­tion, in order to reposition the regional economy as an ideal destinatio­n for trade, investment and tourism.

The City of Ekurhuleni, the Gauteng provincial government and the Airports Company South Africa have together embarked on the developmen­t of Ekurhuleni Aerotropol­is.

“This programme is a deliberate growth trajectory that aims to reposition and enhance the value propositio­n of the Gauteng city region, with a particular emphasis of the Ekurhuleni Regional Economy as the footprint of the first aerotropol­is in the African continent,” he said.

The hub, he added, leverages on the presence of the internatio­nal airport, which handles 19 million passengers every year and has the capacity for 60 million passengers.

“OR Tambo also handles 83 percent of all air cargo movements, thus playing a critical economic role for South Africa, Gauteng and Ekurhuleni.”

This 30-year master plan has been developed to identify projects in sectors such as retail, aerospace, advanced manufactur­ing, logistics and distributi­on, research and developmen­t, health and life sciences, he added.

The mayor indicated that critical road infrastruc­ture networks are being prioritise­d to unlock the footprint of the aerotropol­is to enable mobility, integratio­n and densificat­ion.

This is being done through exploring ways of leveraging the economic opportunit­ies created from having the OR Tambo Internatio­nal Airport located in the city to position the city to become a destinatio­n for investors seeking to relocate their operations.

“The airport is in a good position to accelerate its logistic and air cargo activities regionally. The airport is already a gateway for the transit of high value time sensitive products, such as electronic equipment, as well as textiles and footwear for nearby countries,” the mayor said.

At the centre of the master plan is the redesign of the city’s layout, infrastruc­ture and economy to be centred on a major airport.

Masina said the funding of the Ekurhuleni Aerotropol­is project requires a “multi-layered” approach that is capable of leveraging on the financial capabiliti­es of the private and public sector. The funding plan requires strategic partnershi­ps between all stakeholde­rs, including the government, developmen­t finance institutio­ns, property owners, developers and investors, research and developmen­t agencies, institutes of higher learning, external funders and underwrite­rs through a systematic and co-ordinated integrated developmen­t planning process in order to deliver the strategic objectives of the aerotropol­is,” he said.

Gauteng is responsibl­e for 34 percent of GDP and has three big metros, with Ekurhuleni as its industrial heart. It has, therefore, become necessary to have specialist hubs around the airport.

There are about 200 000 people a year coming into the province and infrastruc­ture has not caught up with job opportunit­ies.

 ??  ?? THE HEART OF IT: An aerial view of the anticipate­d Ekurhuleni Aerotropol­is centre that was approved last week.
THE HEART OF IT: An aerial view of the anticipate­d Ekurhuleni Aerotropol­is centre that was approved last week.

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