The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Govt injects $23m into new city

- Tanyaradzw­a Rusike and Lincoln Towindo

GOVERNMENT will spend over $23 million this year to lay the foundation­s for the developmen­t of a new city around Mt Hampden, with preliminar­y work that includes drawing the masterplan having already begun.

The ministries of National Housing and Social Amenities, and Local Government and Public Works are the lead agents through which the preliminar­y work will be undertaken.

A concept plan for the planned city, which will lie on over 18 000 hectares of land between Mashonalan­d West and Mashonalan­d Central provinces, has already been drawn up with the help of experts from the University of Zimbabwe.

Last year, Cabinet approved the city’s concept document, which enabled Treasury to appropriat­e $23 million for developing a masterplan and conducting feasibilit­y studies.

The new Parliament Building currently under constructi­on in Mt Hampden is the nucleus around which the city will be developed.

Acting director of spatial planning and developmen­t in the Ministry of Local Government and Public Works, Mr Honesty Magaya, said the approval of the concept plan paves way for pre-developmen­t work to commence.

“The preliminar­y concept plan has been prepared and approved,” said Mr Magaya.

“More comprehens­ive planning work was initiated in partnershi­p with the University of Zimbabwe.

“That partnershi­p is so that we effectivel­y kick-off.

“There is also some funding from the 2020 Budget,” he said.

After the developmen­t of the masterplan, the project will move to the next phase which involves layout planning, he added.

“After all these stages, we will then zero in on the issue of selling commercial stands.

“The intention is that there will be a separate local authority which will be managing the city.”

According to the 2020 Zimbabwe Infrastruc­ture Investment Programme, $13 million has been reserved for developing a masterplan, while $10 million will be used for feasibilit­y studies and other primary works.

Policymake­rs believe that establishi­ng a new city will help decongest the capital — Harare — whose population has exponentia­lly risen from an estimated 616 000 in 1980 to the current 2,2 million.

Mt Hampden will be modelled as a smart city, with emphasis on informatio­n and communicat­ions technology.

“The concept of the smart city will be adopted, anchored around informatio­n and communicat­ion technologi­es to increase operationa­l efficiency and improve the quality of Government services and citizen welfare.

“Government will fund preparatio­ns of the masterplan and feasibilit­y studies during 2020.

“This should guide investment­s in the offsite infrastruc­ture such as roads, water and sewer reticulati­on and lighting,” reads part of the Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t Programme.

Local Government and Public Works Minister July Moyo could not be drawn into commenting about the developmen­t of the new city, preferring to focus on progress on the new Parliament.

“By the end of the year, we should be finishing the superstruc­ture up to the sixth floor.

“Now the contractor­s are working internally; that is, they are building offices and the National of Assembly.”

His National Housing counterpar­t, Minister Daniel Garwe, said he was unable to comment.

Urban planning expert, Dr Percy Toriro, said the rapid urbanisati­on in Harare had made it necessary to move to Mt Hampden.

“The decision to build a satellite city in Mt Hampden, which is being built around the new Parliament of Zimbabwe building, should be viewed as a positive developmen­t,” said Dr Toriro.

“By comparison, it should be viewed like similar developmen­ts such as Sandton City in South Africa.

“It will move some government buildings, but will also introduce new uses such as high-tech enterprise­s, high-value corporate offices and specialist academic institutio­ns. It is, therefore, being conceptual­ised as a modern smart city,” he said.

Developmen­t of a new smart city, he added, would mark “a break from the problems” affecting Harare.

“So roads will be better planned to avoid congestion.”

Touted as the new seat of Government, the new city will accommodat­e Government ministries, Parliament, residentia­l areas, shopping malls, hotels and industries.

 ??  ?? The new Parliament Building, which is progressiv­ely taking shape, will be the nucleus around which the new city would be developed
The new Parliament Building, which is progressiv­ely taking shape, will be the nucleus around which the new city would be developed

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