Cape Argus

70% of housing constructi­on has stopped

- MARVIN CHARLES marvin.charles@inl.co.za

THE provincial government has confirmed that 70% of its housing constructi­on projects have been stopped due to the 21-day lockdown.

Spokespers­on for the department of human settlement­s, Marcellino Martin, said: “All activities on our constructi­on sites stopped with effect from March 27, in line with the president announcing the national lockdown.

“We anticipate a delay of about two months. It’s also important to note that due to the unpreceden­ted situation, this could dramatical­ly change.”

Martin said the constructi­on halts could have an impact on the budget, however this has not been quantified.

“Before the lockdown, final touches were being made on sites due for handover, but these couldn’t be finalised in time. After the lockdown, the contractor­s will prioritise finishing the last of their work, so the already identified and deserving beneficiar­ies can take occupancy,” he said.

A massive housing initiative is under way to reduce the number of people living in densely overpopula­ted areas in a bid to fight the spread of the coronaviru­s. There are 29 informal settlement­s countrywid­e which have been identified for the project, including four metros in KwaZuluNat­al, the Eastern Cape, Western Cape and Gauteng. The move will ideally last longer than the 21-day lockdown.

The government has scrambled to provide temporary accommodat­ion, such as converted shipping containers.

Chairperso­n of the Western Cape Property Developmen­t Forum, Deon van Zyl, said: “All projects at implementa­tion stage would have been halted. Delays and increase in costs are now inevitable.

“More concerning is the impact on public projects that tend to fall fowl of pedantic regulatory requiremen­ts.

“Projects that exceed the projected time-frames might have to be reviewed and could even have to be re-tendered, leading to further costs and delays that an industry already in crisis before the lockdown can really, really not afford.”

Van Zyl said once restrictio­ns were lifted, it would take contractor­s some time to re-establish constructi­on teams and other profession­al crews on site, assess damage and losses, and negotiate extensions with clients.

“The delay impacts on contractor­s’ own budgets. Client budgets will no doubt have to take cognisance of these delays and additional funds will have to be sourced to cover the shortfall.

“We’re very concerned that the constructi­on industry has received very little attention during these difficult times. The loss of further contractin­g capacity will have a devastatin­g impact on the delivery of both public sector and private sector projects,” he said.

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