SA Affordable Housing September / October 2017 // Issue: 66 | Page 18

EVENTS Continued from page 14. housing. These include linking local governments and financial markets to address capacity development; supporting financing options for housing infrastructure provision involving the local financial sector; and discussing the underlying risks and opportunities of sub- sovereign lending and its impact on how to develop suitable products and business models. The last speaker of the day was Cass Coovadia, MD of The Banking Association South Africa, who spoke about how it’s time for a game change for social and affordable housing in Africa. He said to address this we must focus on current policy debates on how to best regenerate public housing projects; we must enhance community participation and empowerment in the delivery of housing and informal settlement upgrades; improve low cost housing by involving those communities; and manage housing development without government subsidies. "We cannot sustain the matter in which we provide housing in South Africa currently. We need to go from just building houses to providing sustainable human settlements." OFF TO SITE After the stream discussions, delegates were treated to a site visit to Greenville Garden City which will provide 4 000 low-cost housing opportunities in phases. The project is undertaken in partnership with the City of Cape Town, Western Cape Provincial Government and Garden Cities that are funding the infrastructure and top-structure money for the project. The project is an integrated housing project with breaking new ground (BNG), GAP and bonded houses. Currently Phase 2 has 507 sites. The project uses ABTs and a Bo-Kaap aesthetic for these homes that are built in rows which comprise clusters of two and three units. From left: Anthea Houston, Andrew Chimphondah and Olivier Vidal. CLOSING THE CONFERENCE WITH A BANG The third day featured a design thinking exclusive workshop for housing developers, hosted by Robert Bloom, managing partner of DesignThinkers Group SA. The workshop aimed to assist developers to understand how homeowners use the real estate space. This human-centric user approach assists them in developing homes that will delight their customers and ultimately sell well. In addition, it helps developers achieve goals like building a cohesive community from the residents’ perspective. Four sessions were held with one that focused on the empathy-inspiration-ideation-prototyping- implementation approach or (in other words) embracing an innovation mindset augmented with the relevant skill set. It provided a dynamic mix of short instructional lectures, demonstrations and guided hands-on teamwork. Session two involved stakeholder mapping, which he described as the next step, and is all about establishing a ‘stakeholder map’ to identify roles assumed by participants. Session three revolved around empathy where team members from session two interviewed and observed users in the field to understand their pain-points and find out what delights them. The fourth session involved participants re-grouping to provide ideas and prototypes, to test and retest and to develop fresh, innovative solutions and convert users’ pain-points into delight. The day concluded with an open discussion on the issues raised and lessons learnt. 16 SEPTEMBER - OCTOBER 2017 AFFORDABLE SA HOUSING Councillor Brett Herron, Mayoral Committee Member of Transport and Urban Development Authority (TDA). The room of delegates.