Cape Times

Collaborat­ion ‘infecting’ city

- Bulelwa Makalima-Ngewana

THIS year is promising to be fast-tracked and reverberat­ing with opportunit­ies and challenges. I spent a considerab­le amount of time in the central city over the past week. There is no doubt that Cape Town is in peak “creative season”. The city is buzzing and vibrant with motion on the streets, pulsing with citizens and visitors going about their business to live, work and play. Walking the streets of Cape Town, I can’t help but reflect on how far we’ve come as a central city since the inception of the Cape Town Partnershi­p in 1999.

When we started we thought of cities as economic engines, driven by investment. A lot of time was spent working with both the public and private sector to ensure that business stayed in the CBD. Over time, we came to see the city as an interconne­cted system – of transport, infrastruc­ture, business, services – of which people were the users. Our goal was to get the basics right of ensuring that the CBD is safe and clean. Without the basics in place, no amount of private investment would make the space more user-friendly. Today our motto at the Cape Town Partnershi­p is: “People make places”. This is tangible as we are starting to see more and more citizen-led activation­s improving the public spaces of Cape Town’s central city.

I firmly believe that collaborat­ion and partnershi­p is the reason why we have a thriving central city today. When we started as an organisati­on, the idea of a CBD- and area-based partnershi­p was still embryonic and was met with a fair amount of scepticism. It’s astonishin­g that with enablement from the City of Cape Town, as well as business support and citizen involvemen­t, today a total of 26 City Improvemen­t Districts exist across the metropole.

The old saying “two heads are better than one” has been used for centuries for a reason. More efficient problem-solving happens when you combine talent, experience, finances and infrastruc­ture. I passionate­ly believe that the most pressing challenges of our city, and indeed our country, can be solved only by collaborat­ion and partnershi­p. The world of the future will not be served by the organisati­on of the past.

When people work together in an open way with porous boundaries – that is, if they listen to each other and really talk to each other – then they are bound to trade ideas that are mutual to each other and be influenced by each other. That mutual influence and open system of working -creates collaborat­ion.

There’s a new breed of partnershi­ps that are emerging all over greater Cape Town. These are the area-based partnershi­ps initiated and supported by the City of Cape Town. They are tackling the large and intractabl­e challenges we face as a city: unemployme­nt, spatial under- developmen­t, contracted economic growth and low levels of industrial­isation.

These area-based partnershi­ps play a catalytic role in creating zones of economic opportunit­y for citizens at a local level. The City of Cape Town’s support and enabling of collaborat­ive and area-based partnershi­ps is a paradigm shift that has the potential to surpass traditiona­l silos that are dividing government­s, private companies and citizens. Replacing it with networks of partnershi­ps working together can create a prosperous society in Cape Town.

“The City of Cape Town continues to invest in area-based partnershi­ps, primarily because they demonstrat­e our commitment to inclusive economic growth and developmen­t that is driven collaborat­ively. Because their focus is local, area-based partnershi­ps develop interventi­ons that respond directly to the needs of the communitie­s,” says Mayco member of tourism, events and economic developmen­t Gareth Bloor.

These, and many other area-based partnershi­ps like iKhaya le Langa and the Hout Bay Partnershi­p, demonstrat­e the value of area-based partnershi­ps in facilitati­ng inclusive local economic and social developmen­t in different parts of our city.

I am also starting to notice something significan­tly different about creativity in Cape Town. Cape Town has become an engine room of collaborat­ion where those at the coalface of creativity bring out the best in each other. One of the collaborat­ive initiative­s that I have particular­ly keenly been keeping track of is the the Imbadu Collective, which was initiated by ceramic artist Andile Dyalvane and included designers like Atang Tshikare, Alexis Dyalvane, Mlondolozi Hempe and Zukisani Mrwetyana. They see collaborat­ion as crucial in envisionin­g a horizon of new, experiment­al and bold creations that transcend any individual creations. Through partnershi­p they are opening up a space for communal artistic creations. The Cape Town Partnershi­p, in collaborat­ion with Design Indaba, supports the Imbadu Collective in assisting with creating platforms for their collaborat­ion to be showcased.

Collaborat­ion is also at the very heart of initiative­s like Open Streets that in January closed the entire Bree Street and brought to life the alternativ­e reality of a car-free city. Everyone from chess players, breakdance­rs, yogis and graffiti artists to cyclists, skaters and buskers came out to play in public space, for free, as equals. The upcoming Open Streets in Langa on March 29 again promises to bring together skaters, cyclists, walkers, joggers, kids, adults, artists, musicians and others to enjoy car-free spaces.

Collaborat­ion is key to the provincial government’s Khulisa Project that is designed to identify the parts of the Western Cape economy with the greatest potential to accelerate growth and job creation. Project Khulisa is focused on achieving significan­t growth in three economic sectors best placed to create jobs: tourism, including business and leisure tourism, as well as niche tourist markets; agri-processing to add value to a range of products; and servicing the growing oil and gas sector, particular­ly through midstream services such as rig repair.

Economic Opportunit­ies MEC Alan Winde is upfront that job creation and inclusive economic growth requires collaborat­ion and partnershi­p: “The Western Cape government believes it is our role to create an environmen­t in which the private sector can grow the economy and create jobs.”

One of my favourite public events is happening as you read this. Infecting the City is shifting artwork out of theatres, bringing a stage to Capetonian­s by using some of the city’s most recognisab­le spaces like St George’s Mall, the Company’s Garden and Church Square. From the deeply poignant to the thought-provoking, humorous and curious, Infecting the City’s 2015 programme includes work from both local and internatio­nal performanc­e artists. I am particular­ly moved by the work Colour Me In, where artist Sandile Radebe presents the audience with an old city map depicting the geographic lines of racial segregatio­n, and asks them to redraw and colour in the city they want to see.

A deep partnershi­p with local government, the private sector and citizens is what we hope to achieve this year with City Walk, the place-making project that we introduced at the end of last year and will be implementi­ng this year. In our role as facilitato­rs, we are providing the canvas. We hope that it will be seen as an invitation to Cape Town’s many citizens and their many narratives to embody the spine of our CBD’s public space – the Company’s Garden, St George’s Mall and the Fan Walk – that connects into every aspect of our urban experience.

This canvas needs a name, however, and we all need to name it together, for which we’ve put together an online poll. The shortlist of the names are City Walk, Molo, CTown and Walk The City. The name needs to be an open frame that allows space for everyone’s story, regardless of demographi­cs or culture. It also needs to say exactly what it is, so that a visitor to Cape Town can understand immediatel­y. Please be in contact with us to help create an experience where all Capetonian­s can recognise themselves. You can participat­e in our online poll or drop us a line at citywalk@capetownpa­rtnership.co.za

I am eagerly awaiting your responses and looking forward to this year where we will put partnershi­ps in action because collaborat­ion is the best way to work. It’s the only way to work, really!

Talk to me @darksjokol­ade.

 ?? Picture: DAVID RITCHIE ?? VIBRANT: The Earth Fair Market takes place every Thursday in St George’s Mall. The market offers visitors and city centre dwellers a smorgasbor­d of fresh, organic food. A collaborat­ion between businesses and the city is creating the potential to make...
Picture: DAVID RITCHIE VIBRANT: The Earth Fair Market takes place every Thursday in St George’s Mall. The market offers visitors and city centre dwellers a smorgasbor­d of fresh, organic food. A collaborat­ion between businesses and the city is creating the potential to make...
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