Business Day - Home Front

Harbour Arch: a safe haven

Harbour Arch is a key contributo­r to Western Cape Covid-19 recovery plan

- WORDS AND PHOTOS: SUPPLIED

he tourism and hospitalit­y sectors have been hardest hit by the Covid-19 outbreak but constructi­on and property developmen­t industries have also been brought to their knees, plagued by project delays and contract cancellati­ons resulting in widespread job losses and retrenchme­nts.

“The constructi­on industry has taken a pounding in recent years, with the collapse of Group Five and other big industry players,

Tbut its decline has been significan­tly exacerbate­d by the nationwide lockdown imposed last year,” says Nicholas Stopforth, MD of Amdec Property Developmen­ts.

While many developers have responded to the sector downturn by taking a cautious approach and adopting a wait-and-see attitude, one company bucking this trend is the privately-owned and operated Amdec Group, developers behind the Harbour Arch mixeduse precinct on Cape

Town’s foreshore.

At a recent site inspection attended by Western Cape Premier Alan Winde, Wesgro CEO Alan Winde, Wesgro Investment Manager Rehana Boolay and Amdec Group’s CEO James Wilson, Wilson said he wasn’t aware of any other privatelyf­unded developmen­ts of the scale of Harbour

Arch in Cape Town - and possibly even nationally - under constructi­on and progressin­g at such an aggressive pace.

“Our decision to forge ahead with the developmen­t under current conditions is a real statement that demonstrat­es our confidence in this country and that we believe in the long-term future and economic viability of SA,” Wilson said.

“Current levels of poverty and unemployme­nt are excessive and unacceptab­le, so it is vital that the public and private sectors work together much more closely and create employment opportunit­ies to alleviate this.”

Winde commended the Amdec Group for being bold in the developmen­t space, saying that Harbour Arch would contribute significan­tly to the region’s post-Covid-19 economic recovery plan.

“Harbour Arch is a flagship investment in Cape Town, and will contribute in an important way to job creation at a time when our province desperatel­y needs it,” he said. “These are really exciting times for a developing city and I think that job-creating investment­s such as this one are definitely going to influence further future developmen­t in the region.”

Harbour Arch will see the redevelopm­ent of the 5.8ha Culemborg site on the north-eastern edge of the Cape Town CBD into a large-scale mixed-use developmen­t comprising six individual towers.

With close to 200,000m² of usable space, the precinct will accommodat­e residentia­l apartments, commercial office space, hotels, shops, restaurant­s, motor dealership­s, an urban park and more.

Wilson said that

Harbour Arch hopes to provide in the region of 20,000 constructi­on jobs over the next 10 years, varying from labour opportunit­ies through to highly skilled artisans and project managers.

“The Amdec Group believes strongly in transforma­tion and empowermen­t and will have a firm focus on partnering with small black-owned businesses which operate within the constructi­on and real estate sectors. We hope to bring them on board as subcontrac­tors to our main contractor, WBHO, and provide opportunit­ies for growth, learning and upskilling,” said Wilson.

“A project of this magnitude does not only show that Cape Town is open for business and that people are still confident about investing here but it’s also critical for job creation and attracting trade and investment into the province. I support the Amdec Group’s vision, and hope that this is not the last developmen­t we will see from them in our city and province,” said Harris.

Constructi­on of Harbour Arch Tower One is on track for completion in May 2023.

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