Affordable housing in relation to land, finance and tenure in the city of Cape Town

Mini-thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree Master of Technology: Public Management in the Faculty of Business and Management Sciences at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology === Affordable housing delivery has been a major deliverable for the South African...

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Main Author: Witbooi, Charles
Language:en
Published: Cape Peninsula University of Technology 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11838/1677
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-cput-oai-localhost-20.500.11838-16772018-05-28T05:09:48Z Affordable housing in relation to land, finance and tenure in the city of Cape Town Witbooi, Charles Mini-thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree Master of Technology: Public Management in the Faculty of Business and Management Sciences at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology Affordable housing delivery has been a major deliverable for the South African government since 1994. The apartheid laws created a fragmented city and had a negative impact on previously vibrant communities. Since the dawn of the new South Africa in 1994, government has created a platform to stimulate the creation of sustainable communities. This has proven to be a daunting task and the progress in this regard has been slow. In 1994, the South African government published the White Paper on A Housing Policy and Strategy for South Africa. This was followed in 2004 by a housing code, A Comprehensive Plan for Sustainable Human Settlements, called “Breaking New Ground”, which contained practical guidelines to implement sustainable human settlement development. The aforementioned was supported by other legislation and the abolishment of apartheid planning legislation. Sustainable human settlement development consists of many facets, but this mini-thesis focused on three themes, being land, finance and tenure options with respect to affordable housing delivery in the City of Cape Town. Ten housing practitioners were identified, representing government and the private sector. A semi-structured interview comprising of 12 questions was used to allow the housing practitioners to share their knowledge on the aforementioned themes during the process. The research found that a shortage of affordable housing is an international problem and not just a South African or City of Cape Town phenomenon. With regard to land it concluded that strategic government-owned land parcels remain underdeveloped. Despite government’s comprehensive finance programmes, the study found that the financial sector had no formal obligation to assist government with the delivery programme. With regard to tenure options, the research concluded that additional forms of tenure, such as incremental and rental options, should become more prevalent in the delivery model. 2015-09-14T05:47:12Z 2016-02-24T10:53:25Z 2015-09-14T05:47:12Z 2016-02-24T10:53:25Z 2015 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11838/1677 en Cape Peninsula University of Technology
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language en
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description Mini-thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree Master of Technology: Public Management in the Faculty of Business and Management Sciences at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology === Affordable housing delivery has been a major deliverable for the South African government since 1994. The apartheid laws created a fragmented city and had a negative impact on previously vibrant communities. Since the dawn of the new South Africa in 1994, government has created a platform to stimulate the creation of sustainable communities. This has proven to be a daunting task and the progress in this regard has been slow. In 1994, the South African government published the White Paper on A Housing Policy and Strategy for South Africa. This was followed in 2004 by a housing code, A Comprehensive Plan for Sustainable Human Settlements, called “Breaking New Ground”, which contained practical guidelines to implement sustainable human settlement development. The aforementioned was supported by other legislation and the abolishment of apartheid planning legislation. Sustainable human settlement development consists of many facets, but this mini-thesis focused on three themes, being land, finance and tenure options with respect to affordable housing delivery in the City of Cape Town. Ten housing practitioners were identified, representing government and the private sector. A semi-structured interview comprising of 12 questions was used to allow the housing practitioners to share their knowledge on the aforementioned themes during the process. The research found that a shortage of affordable housing is an international problem and not just a South African or City of Cape Town phenomenon. With regard to land it concluded that strategic government-owned land parcels remain underdeveloped. Despite government’s comprehensive finance programmes, the study found that the financial sector had no formal obligation to assist government with the delivery programme. With regard to tenure options, the research concluded that additional forms of tenure, such as incremental and rental options, should become more prevalent in the delivery model.
author Witbooi, Charles
spellingShingle Witbooi, Charles
Affordable housing in relation to land, finance and tenure in the city of Cape Town
author_facet Witbooi, Charles
author_sort Witbooi, Charles
title Affordable housing in relation to land, finance and tenure in the city of Cape Town
title_short Affordable housing in relation to land, finance and tenure in the city of Cape Town
title_full Affordable housing in relation to land, finance and tenure in the city of Cape Town
title_fullStr Affordable housing in relation to land, finance and tenure in the city of Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed Affordable housing in relation to land, finance and tenure in the city of Cape Town
title_sort affordable housing in relation to land, finance and tenure in the city of cape town
publisher Cape Peninsula University of Technology
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11838/1677
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