Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

5000 stands, more wards for Bulawayo

- Vusumuzi Dube Online News Editor

BULAWAYO is set to get a 5 000 suburb constructe­d on its outskirts, with the location expected to be incorporat­ed into the city once the delimitati­on exercise is completed.

The Bulawayo City Council is pushing for an additional six wards to be incorporat­ed into the city during the delimitati­on exercise, which will see a number of areas that currently fall under Umguza constituen­cy being incorporat­ed into the city.

According to The Presidenti­al Proclamati­on 15E of 2004 and the subsequent Statutory Instrument­s (SI) that created the metropolit­an provinces of Bulawayo and Harare, metropolit­an boundaries were declared as covering a radius of up to 40 kilometres and in Bulawayo, most of those areas are under the jurisdicti­on of Umguza Rural District Council (RDC).

It has since emerged that a private developer is already working on the developmen­t of 5 000 serviced stands which will be under the city’s jurisdicti­on once the delimitati­on exercise is complete. This came out in a BCC engineerin­g services report, where the developer, Hencock Ranching has sent a proposal to partner the local authority in the upgrading and operation of the sewerage services to cater for the new developmen­ts.

The developer is working on the upmarket Hopeville, Hopelyn and Hope Estate housing projects, which according to the report will have a shopping mall, three shopping centres, a hotel, seven primary schools, three secondary schools and a lifestyle estate.

“The standing agreement between the City of Bulawayo and the developer with regards wastewater treatement is that Hencock Ranching are expected to construct decentrali­sed wastewater treatment facilities to cater for the full extent of their proposed developmen­t. However, upon assessing the total volume of sewage to be generated by the full extent of the developmen­t, the contractor realised that the wastewater treatment facilities to be constructe­d will be too costly to consider as stand-alone units,” reads the report.

The developer is aiming at partnering the local authority in the operations of Aisleby sewerage treatment works where only one of the three plants is operationa­l and dischargin­g into Umguza River.

“Aisleby two is presently under BCC rehabilita­tion and is receiving no inflows. The rehabilita­tion is approximat­ely 75 percent complete, but all rehabilita­tion work has come to a standstill due to BCC budgetary constraint­s and the contractor, Natwecraft, has demobilise­d for site.

“Aisleby three treats wastewater using the return activated sludge process. It was rehabilita­ted from 2016 to 2018 and the plant worked satisfacto­rily until December 2021 when a collapse of the outfall sewer completely cut off the flow of influent to the plant,” reads the report.

According to the developer’s proposal, rather than constructi­ng discrete sewage treatment works for the housing developmen­ts, the developers will also identify collaborat­ive opportunit­ies with BCC in the successful upgrading and operation of sewage services in existing sewer catchments to the north of the city.

“Hencock Ranching proposes to repair the collapsed section of the Aisleby three outfall. The developer will also investigat­e funding the completion of Aisleby two. The understand­ing is that the funding required to complete the rehabilita­tion works at Aisleby two is estimated to be US$431 000.

“The developer is to investigat­e funding the rehabilita­tion of irrigation infrastruc­ture and take over the running of Aisleby farm, which is presently fallow on a lease agreement, using effluent from the three Aisleby waste water treatment plants. The viability of this arrangemen­t depends on the availabili­ty of sufficient effluent to irrigate a minimum area of 50 hectares,” reads the report.

As it stands, once council has approved the partnershi­p agreement, the necessary documentat­ion will be drafted, detailing the partnershi­p agreement and signed by representa­tives of BCC and the developers.

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