Sunday Times

BEACH BALL

Nkosazana's holiday playground

- TASCHICA PILLAY

A MERE R35-million is all you need if you want to live in one of the country’s most expensive neighbourh­oods. That’s the going rate for a property at Zimbali Coastal Resort on the KwaZulu-Natal north coast.

Homeowners include businesswo­man Bridgette Radebe and her husband, Minister in the Presidency, Jeff Radebe; chairwoman of the African Union Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma; singer Patricia Lewis; former Proteas captain Shaun Pollock; and Stephen Saad, founder of Aspen Pharmacare.

Properties along Milkwood, Cherrywood and Corkwood, the most sought-after addresses, are on the market for up to R40-million.

These sea-facing properties with opulent, fine finishes, hidden in lush vegetation, have been valued up to R35-million, according to recent municipal property valuations.

The estate boasts a gym, restaurant­s, bars, a valley of pools, jungle gyms for children, A BIT RICH: The Cherrywood Drive home in Zimbali, left, is on sale for R36-million and the one in Milkwood Drive, centre, will set you back R40-million. Zimbali’s valley of the pools, right, borders the beach and has a restaurant and bar and tennis and squash courts.

According to Abubaker Rahim of eValuation­s, who conducted the latest property valuations for the KwaDukuza Municipali­ty, that included estates such as Zimbali, Simbithi, Brettenwoo­d and Kirkwood, said Zimbali had the most expen- sive properties in the province.

“People pay a lot of money for properties on the beach.”

He said a property in Zimbali which had been improved may have cost R2-million in 2010 but this would have increased to R5-million because of the improvemen­ts.

The most expensive beachfront properties along Milkwood Drive, according to the valuation, are priced between R10-million and R35-million.

The sale of a four-bedroom house on Milkwood Drive late last year for R34-million was the most expensive transactio­n the estate has yet seen.

Among the high-end properties on the market are two in Milkwood and Cherrywood selling for R40-million and R36million respective­ly.

Vaughn Reiche, of Zimbali’s sales office, said properties along the 3.6km beach were the most expensive because their sea views.

“It is the quality of lifestyle on the estate — security, nature conservati­on, facilities, easy beach access, two five-star hotels and a world-class golf course — that attracts people,” said Reiche. He said owing to the quality of the developmen­ts, prices keep escalating.

AndreasWas­senaar, of Seeff Dolphin Coast, said Zimbali was definitely the premier neighbourh­ood in KwaZuluNat­al. “Property values increased substantia­lly between 2004 and 2008. In the past six months there has been a scarcity of properties, which means the pricing will start to move.”

Adjacent to Zimbali is a palatial 7ha property owned by a Zimbabwean businessma­n, Robert Mhlanga.

It was sold by Michelle Linda Mauvis a few years ago to Mhlanga, a retired air vice-marshal, for R100-million.

He apparently spent millions more on man-made lakes and renovation­s that included bulletproo­f windows.

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