Re: New Gates for Kruger National Park
Posted: Sat Oct 15, 2016 4:51 pm
Nkosi City will still accommodate the rich and the poor, like Pienaar does. It will be a settlement with 3 000 RDP houses, 800 middle-income properties and 700 high-income houses.
It will also tap into the tourism industry – because of its proximity to the Kruger National Park – by having a lodge.
A new gate into the park will be opened. A hospital, schools, a technical vocational education and training college, agriprocessing plants and retail stores will form part of the new city.
The Nkosi City project has been in the pipeline for about six years. Initially, the Mpumalanga government did not buy into the idea and it was shelved, despite being part of Mbombela municipality’s Integrated Development Plan.
It now has the government’s support, and Rural Development and Land Reform Minister Gugile Nkwinti approved the handover of the land to the Communal Property Association. Nkwinti’s department will also send association members to Poland on a study tour of agricities.
The association’s spokesperson, Mandla Msibi, said Nkosi City would be built by the local Pienaar residents from start to finish.
While environmental impact, feasibility and socioeconomic studies are done, locals will undergo training in the various skills and also help to form cooperatives.
“This is a poverty alleviation project that will have an effect on the local economy” Msibi said.
“We have taken everybody on board. Tenders here, from construction to anything, will benefit the cooperatives formed by the local people.
http://city-press.news24.com/News/mpuma ... y-20160611
It will also tap into the tourism industry – because of its proximity to the Kruger National Park – by having a lodge.
A new gate into the park will be opened. A hospital, schools, a technical vocational education and training college, agriprocessing plants and retail stores will form part of the new city.
The Nkosi City project has been in the pipeline for about six years. Initially, the Mpumalanga government did not buy into the idea and it was shelved, despite being part of Mbombela municipality’s Integrated Development Plan.
It now has the government’s support, and Rural Development and Land Reform Minister Gugile Nkwinti approved the handover of the land to the Communal Property Association. Nkwinti’s department will also send association members to Poland on a study tour of agricities.
The association’s spokesperson, Mandla Msibi, said Nkosi City would be built by the local Pienaar residents from start to finish.
While environmental impact, feasibility and socioeconomic studies are done, locals will undergo training in the various skills and also help to form cooperatives.
“This is a poverty alleviation project that will have an effect on the local economy” Msibi said.
“We have taken everybody on board. Tenders here, from construction to anything, will benefit the cooperatives formed by the local people.
http://city-press.news24.com/News/mpuma ... y-20160611