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NATIONAL TREASURY NEIGHBOURHOOD DEVELOPMENT PARTNERSHIP GRANT.

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Presentation on theme: "NATIONAL TREASURY NEIGHBOURHOOD DEVELOPMENT PARTNERSHIP GRANT."— Presentation transcript:

1 NATIONAL TREASURY NEIGHBOURHOOD DEVELOPMENT PARTNERSHIP GRANT

2 OUR OBJECTIVES AND AGENDA FOR TODAY Strengthen strategic and practical alignment between City of Matlosana Municipality and NT: NDGP on the approach to pursuing more integrated, equitable spatial and economic development Focus on spatial urban form and spatial targeting using the Urban Networks Strategy Accelerating catalytic interventions in City of Matlosana Municipality Objective Strategic partnership based alignment of City of Matlosana Municipality and NT and implementation of the Urban Networks Strategy This requires clarity on the next steps with: Strategic spatial planning Pipeline of catalytic interventions Desired outcome 2

3 CONTEXT OF THE NEIGHBOURHOOD DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME The NDP was established in 2006 and is responsible for managing the Neighbourhood Development Partnership Grant. Grant Purpose: From the start of the programme until the end of 2012/13 the NDP has: –Approved municipal business plans to a value of R4.0bn –Approved project plans to the value of R 3.9 bn. –Completed 129 municipal NDP projects –Disbursed a total of R615m to service providers and municipalities, 94% of its budget. To support and facilitate the planning and development of neighbourhood development programmes and projects that provide catalytic infrastructure to leverage 3rd party public and private sector development towards improving the quality of life of residents in targeted underserved neighbourhoods (townships generally) Division of Revenue Bill, 2013 (Bill No. 02 of 2013)

4 NDPG FUNDED URBAN HUBS IN SA CITIES: BRIDGE CITY, ETHEKWINI

5 5 NDPG: LESSONS LEARNT IN TOWNSHIP REGENERATION Multiple spatially disparate “ad-hoc” township projects in the absence of an integrated and co-ordinated city-wide urban regeneration strategy has very low impact –All spheres of government need to be involved. Project prioritisation not to be informed by vested interests Private fixed investment is dependant on the above Limited municipal capacity to plan, assemble and align multiple funding sources in single large-scale mixed use development Land issues dictate project progress and viability Opportunities exist to develop and diversify township economies by leveraging mixed-use transit orientated development

6 6 FOCUS IS ON CITIES AS THEY ARE THE CENTRES OF SOCIO-ECONOMIC ACTIVITY

7 A TARGETED INVESTMENT PROGRAMME IN SA’S 18 LARGER URBAN CENTRES 7

8 URBAN GROWTH MAY DEEPEN INEQUALITY AND EXCLUSION IN OUR CITIES 8 Poverty and unemployment, especially among youth Sprawling, monotonous, dormitory landscapes, with long travel times for poor to access amenities, services & opportunities Compounded by climate change and weak governance, and may result in rising social conflict (service delivery protests) Accelerating economic growth required that we address: –future supply side bottlenecks from unavailability of public infrastructure (new, expanded and rehabilitated assets) –continued low levels of private sector fixed investment in the built environment

9 A MORE STRATEGIC APPROACH IS CRITICAL TO LEVERAGE REAL CHANGE Available Public Resources Need in marginalised areas DIFFERENTIAL Private fixed investment … and strategy requires: Consensus on concepts A programmatic approach Strong partnerships GAP

10 WHY FOCUS ON URBAN SPATIAL FORM? Severe inequality is clearly represented in the spatial form of all our cities –Exclusionary (spatial patterns of access to services and opportunity) –Inefficient (growing fiscal and economic costs in supporting the current spatial form and design) –Unsustainable (severe environmental and social risks) Public policy unwittingly reinforced these divides, and set them in concrete –A lack of adequate forward planning to deal with continuing pulling power of cities & environmental factors affecting cities –A renewed focus on the quality of urban and economic growth is required 10

11 THE NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN URGES COORDINATED ACTION –Tackle spatial development patterns directly –Combine the use of multiple instruments: Strengthen strategic spatial planning Coordinate the use of Planning, regulatory and investment tools and strategies Leverage public transport, infrastructure, land and housing investments Use a spatial focus to target more public resources 11 “The Commission provides a proposed schema for spatial targeting that indicates where investment should be focused, and we identify elements of the existing broad consensus for transforming towns and cities” National Development Plan, 2012

12 THE URBAN NETWORKS STRATEGY An integrated hierarchy of land use clustering & connectivity

13 THE NEW APPROACH WILL ENABLE GROWTH & DEVELOPMENT Transit-orientated Partnership-based Targeted (precinct) investment Aimed at strategic spatial transformation Optimise access to social & economic opportunities, especially for the poor Minimise transaction costs to participate in the urban economy Replicable model 13

14 I.Primary Network II.Secondary Network 14 THE TWO SPATIAL PRINCIPLES UNDERPIN THE URBAN NETWORKS STRATEGY The primary network is at city-wide scale and consists of anchor nodes, i.e. the CBD and a number of Urban Hubs, as well as Activity Corridors between these anchor nodes. Secondary Nodes are smaller nodes within township areas connected to the Urban Hub and serving as “neighbourhood” or lower order nodes.

15 ... IDENTIFY & STRENGTHEN HUBS... 15 URBAN NETWORKS STRATEGY

16 16... CONNECT... PRIMARY NETWORK

17 ... CONNECT... SECONDARY NETWORK 17

18 Strong urban network with a hierarchy of well connected nodes Efficient flows of people, goods & information Targeted public infrastructure that catalyses ubiquitous distribution of public & private sector investment Good access to jobs & amenities The urban networks strategy is aimed at integrated growth & development

19 19 INVESTMENT CASE STUDY: MAMELODI Numerous ad-hoc non integrated or aligned projects. Little co-ordination of public funds

20 20 INVESTMENT CASE STUDY: MAMELODI R138m Urban Hub and secondary nodes, spatial logic, spatial targeting results in integrated or aligned projects. Better leverage through the co-ordination of Public funds

21 21 Urban Network Network Elements InterventionInvestment Phasing Primary Network CBD Regeneration and management Spatial Development Objectives Network Connectivity Optimisation Urban Hubs Mixed-use development and management Primary Transport Link Develop/Upgrade and management Activity Corridor Infill & Densification Secondary Network Secondary Transport Link Develop/Upgrade IDENTIFICATION & PLANNING WILL UNLOCK A PIPELINE OF PRIORITISED CATALYTIC PROJECTS…

22 … THAT ARE CRITICAL TO THE STRENGTHENING OF THE PRIMARY NETWORK CBD Urban Hubs Primary Public Transport Links Activity Corridors & Secondary Transport Links Network Topology:

23 FROM STRATEGY TO ACTION … 23 Strategic spatial planning Urban network identification & planning Intervention planning Precinct planning Identification of catalytic projects Project Planning Detailed design Pipeline Implementation management Life-cycle Management Performance monitoring and evaluation Precinct management Investment facilitation

24 24 NDPG FUNDED URBAN HUBS IN SA CITIES: MITCHELLS PLAIN

25 VIBRANT URBAN HUBS ARE KEY ENTRY POINTS High density, mixed use precinct that contains a diverse variety of land uses, services and activities Function: –“Town centre” for township/s –Gateway to the rest of the wider urban area Efficient multi-modal public transport system & a precinct network of public spaces and walkways Leveraging of investment: –Retail –Recreation, hospitality & tourism –Offices, banking –Community facilities & govt services –Higher density housing Within an urban design framework that promotes a vibrant sense of place in which to live, work and play 25

26 26 Diversity Investment No & Type of tenants (Traders, SME’s, National Chains) Land Use Mix Private/Public Split INDIVIDUAL URBAN HUB STRATEGY TO BE DETERMINED VIA INVESTMENT INDEX High Low High 3. On a road to nowhere

27 CBD & HUBS REQUIRE A CLEAR PRECINCT MANAGEMENT STRATEGY TO ENSURE FULL LIFE CYCLE OPTIMISATION 27 Objective: An inclusive, vibrant, safe, investment friendly hub Economic Development Place marketing Lifestyle event management Risk management Safety o Security presence o Active edges rather than dead zones - e.g. walls & vacant stands Clean and well maintained precinct public spaces 27 Community Municipality Public Sector Investors Private Sector Investors Developers Traders Tenants Property Owners Precinct Management

28 … AND AN URBAN DESIGN TOOLKIT WILL ASSIST CITIES TO OPTIMISE VIBRANCY & INVESTMENT 28 Identification of spatial structuring elements: –Rail & road infrastructure –Modal facilities –Pedestrian network –Public spaces Planning & design principles for: –Optimal clustering –Making of a qualitative public realm –Investment phasing towards private sector leveraging

29 29 CONVERGENCE OF PEOPLE IN HUBS TO ATTRACT PRIVATE SECTOR INVESTMENT

30 MIG PTIS NDPG UDZ SHRZ CBD Developed Area Underserved Townships THE PIPELINE IS AIMED TOWARDS AN INTEGRATED FISCAL PACKAGE

31 TIME-FRAMES: PLANNING 31 COUNCIL RESOLUTION URBAN NETWORK ELEMENTS IDENTIFIED MEMORANDUM OF AGREEMENT MUNICIPAL WORK PLAN 4 WEEKS 4 MONTHS 2 WEEKS 3 MONTHS 6 MONTHS 3 WEEKS

32 KEY ACTIONS AND TIMELINES Stage I: (DATE) Engagement Two (Technical Meeting) Stage II: (DATE) Council resolution approving participation in the NDPG Institutional / Governance arrangements Confirmed NDPG conditions (Memorandum of Agreement) Urban Network Identification Service Provider procurement & capacity support requirements Stage III: (DATE) Urban Network Plan completed Stage IV: (DATE) Precinct Plan completed Catalytic NDPG projects identified with timeframes 32

33 Way forward


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