24.8 C
Cape Town
Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Construction of “River Club” development underway

Published on

 

 

Ground has been broken and construction of the controversial “River Club” development, now known as Riverlands, is now underway.

 

The Liesbeek Leisure Properties Trust (LLPT) hosted a sood-turning event on Wednesday to officiate construction of the project. Western Cape premier, Alan Winde, and Cape Town mayor, Geordin-Hill Lewis were present at the proceedings. The government and municipality have long supported the project, along with First Nation’s group, the Western Cape First Nations Collective.

 

Vision

 

The LLPT says the R4.6 billion centre, located between the Liesbeek Parkway and the Liesbeek River, will be a 14-hectare mixed-used development. It is primarily intended to be used as a “First Nation’s Heritage and Media Centre”, but subsidised housing and transport infrastructure will also be built on the site.

 

Spokesperson for the LLPT, James Tannenberger, says once the centre is constructed it will be operated and managed by the Western Cape First Nations Collective (WCFNC).

 

“The LLPT recognises that without the WCFNC leaderships’ commitment to finding common agreement with the developer on how best to celebrate and commemorate the history and heritage of the Riverlands site, reaching this significant moment would not have been possible.”

 

Controversy

 

This development has been the subject of legal challenges since 2017, with some First Nation groups in support and other opposing it. It even made it to the Supreme Court of Appeal.

 

Opposition groups (specifically the Observatory Civic Association and the First Nations’ group, the Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin Indigenous Traditional Council) did not want anything to be built on the site. It believed the site itself, which is the Two Rivers Urban Park, carried cultural significance and building on it would diminish that.

 

But challenges to the project were ultimately dismissed.

 

READ MORE: River Club: Full steam ahead for Amazon headquarters

Caitlin Maledo
Caitlin Maledo
Caitlin is an enthusiastic journalist, that has been exploring her interest in broadcast media since 2019. With a natural curiosity for the world around her, you'll always find her poking around hidden gems throughout Cape Town and surrounds.

Latest articles

SWAT team & ward-specific metro police in Cape Town budget

    Cape Town's Mayoral Committee Member for Safety and Security, JP Smith, has called on community safety structures to support the City's draft budget for...

German tourists rescued after getting lost on Table Mountain

    Mountain rescue agencies are imploring hikers to do their research on whichever trail they choose. This is after two German hikers got lost, and...

Another DNA backlog crisis: Over 140,000 cases not processed

    The South African Police Service (SAPS) Forensic Science Laboratory is once again under scrutiny as it faces a DNA backlog crisis that now exceeds...