The Civil Engineering Contractor February 2019 | Page 19

ON SITE There was minimal earthworks, as the pit was shallow. featuring Johannesburg Mayor Herman Mashaba. “We will thereafter start to refit the existing buildings, and construction of the new building will commence early in 2019, with phased completions starting from November 2019 up to April 2020,” Pautz says. The project is being handled by ATThemba, which is a partnership between Atterbury and iThemba Property (previously Circlevest). DiverCity Urban Property Fund, the owner of the development, is jointly owned by a group of investors — Atterbury Properties, iThemba, Tallis Holdings, RMH Properties, and Nedbank Properties — and invests in specifically mixed-use inner-city precincts with a focus on affordable housing with all the ancillary services around it. “This fund is on a mission to invest in inner cities in South Africa, with some commercial development to create job opportunities around it,” explains Carel Kleynhans, director: iThemba Property Development. Rentals range between R2 500 and R6 000/month, for anything from www.civilsonline.co.za a small studio to a two-bedroom apartment. “DiverCity’s strategy is to take a nodal approach, focused on upgrading specific areas, rather than a shotgun approach,” explains Kleynhans. The R2-billion investment by DiverCity represents approximately 2 600 apartments and about 30 000m 2 of retail and commercial development, with Atterbury and iThemba executing the developments. Jewel City phase 2 will be between R400-million and R600-million. With the 1 000 residential units as part of the build, there will be an additional 1 400 DiverCity-owned units outside of the precinct, within a few hundred metre walking distance. This will ultimately lead to over 7 000 people (with an average three to four people per apartment) staying in and around Jewel City. It is targeting the working- and middle-class individual and family. Sod-turning ceremony Opening the sod-turning ceremony on 19 November last year, director of Atterbury Property Fund, Phuti Mahanyele, said: “This development speaks to the issue of undoing the divides created by apartheid: we’re looking at segregation in our cities by race and class divide and rather including people into more integrated neighbourhoods, close to job opportunities and amenities. This precinct is close to Absa, which ensures that for those people living here, it will be a wholesome environment; close to work, to a gym, as well as a health care centre. This is an area that was previously closed off: there was previously a number of hubs — Maboneng and the Absa precinct — functioning in isolation that are now going to be linked and integrated into a single mixed-use precinct, with people living here in affordable homes, with shopping centres and with commercial activity. “The major issue facing our country is the need for more affordable homes. This project also creates jobs: 1 279 temporary jobs will be created and 1 834 permanent jobs. Reconstruction starts at the end of January 2019, with the first units being available CEC February 2019 | 17