Cape Town Council Advances Affordable Housing With Approval Of Fruit And Veg Site Redevelopment
Written by: BizCommunity Editor Save to Instapaper
Source: City of Cape Town. An artist rendering of the proposed social housing development at the “Fruit and Veg” site between Kent and Bloemhof Streets.
This comes eight years after municipal land, between Kent and Bloemhof Streets on the border of District Six, was first earmarked for affordable housing. The city council gave in-principle approval for the land to be released for social housing in 2023.
YG Group is the successful bidder to develop the site. Council on Thursday voted in favour of selling the site to the company for just over R10m.
The mixed-use development will include retail space and 375 residential units, of which 237 will be social housing.
Social housing units are rental-only, partly funded by once-off state subsidies from the national government. The Social Housing Regulatory Authority (SHRA) ensures they are rented to households earning under R22,000 a month, at rental amounts below R7,326. Open-market homes and retail space are often added to cross-subsidise costs.
The “Fruit and Veg” site is among 21 City-owned land parcels where affordable housing is planned. Ten of these are within a 10km radius of the city centre. The City has about 12,000 affordable housing units in its pipeline.
The draft sale agreement between the City and YG Group includes a clause to ensure that should the company not complete the development, including its social-housing component, within seven years of the sale date, the contract will default and the YG Group will have to compensate the City.
The social-housing development will depend on whether subsidies are received from SHRA, via the national government.
Other developments where City-owned land has been released for social housing have been delayed. At Pine Road and Dillon Lane in Woodstock, land was released for two developments in 2019, but construction has not yet started. At the Salt River Market, land was released in 2022, but SHRA funding has not yet been approved.
Addressing the council on Thursday, 21 August 2025 mayco member for human settlements Carl Pophaim, called on the national government “to come to the party when it matters – in their actual budgets – as opposed to in the promises made during State of the Nation Addresses.”
In response to the challenges with social-housing subsidies, the City plans to build affordable housing units at other sites without any direct state subsidies.
Published originally on GroundUp
© 2025 GroundUp. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Get new press articles by email
We submit and automate press releases distribution for a range of clients. Our platform brings in automation to 5 social media platforms with engaging hashtags. Our new platform The Pulse, allows premium PR Agencies to have access to our newsletter subscribers.
Latest from
- 7 Business Trends Your SME Can Leverage In 2026
- Sadilar Amplifies Visibility And Impact During Conference Season
- Future-ready Logistics- 5 Shifts TO Watch In 2026 (SUB-saharan Africa)
- Dunlop Urges Motorists To Prioritise Tyre Safety On The Busy Joburg To Cape Town Festive Route
- Poverty Trends Report Shows National Progress But Flags Growing Challenges In Gauteng
- SDG Challenge SA 2025 Highlights The Power Of Youth Innovation In Shaping A Sustainable Future
- Experienced Industry Leader Pauli Van Dyk Named Dean Of AFDA’s Upcoming Hatfield Campus
- South Africans Keep Tourism Alive As Homegrown Travel And Local Spending Rise
- Pretoria Student Wins Global Excel Esports Competition
- AfDB Steps Up Support For Somalia With $76m Investment In Roads And Regional Integration
- Corporate Law Experts Warn Directors Of Serious Consequences For Improper Transaction Approval
- New 3% Inflation Target Begins To Shift Expectations In South African Economy
- Retail As A Development Catalyst Drives New Africa Developments’ Inclusive Growth Strategy
- Collaborative SEF Model Shows How Civil Society And State Can Rebuild Economic Trust
- Shumani Accelerates Industrial Growth With Bheka Forklifts And New Equipment Plans For 2026
The Pulse Latest Articles
- Education Is The Frontline Of Inequality, Business Must Show Up (December 11, 2025)
- When The Purple Profile Pictures Fade, The Real Work Begins (December 11, 2025)
- Dear Santa, Please Skip The Socks This Year (December 10, 2025)
- Brandtech+ Has 100 Global Creative Roles For South African Talent (December 9, 2025)
- The Woman Behind Bertie: Michelle’s Journey To Cape Town’s Beloved Mobile Café (December 9, 2025)
