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Assagay, Alverstone, Shongweni
and Summerveld (2008)
‘Once you have
lived in Assagay, you won’t want to live
anywhere else.’
That’s the word
according to Keith Wakefield, and he should
know. Keith is owner of Wakefields, chairman of
MortgageSA, a successful developer in his own
right and, after more than three decades in the
game, one of the most influential and
experienced real estate experts in South Africa.
The Assagay he is
referring to is one of four suburbs in the outer
reaches of KwaZulu-Natal’s Upper Highway region.
They run in a corridor west of the boom town of
Hillcrest. Assagay and, on the plateau above it,
the agricultural community of Alverstone, lie on
Kassier Road that links Hillcrest and the M13
motorway. Across the M13, lie the horsy hot
spots of Shongweni and, further west, Summerveld,
home of horse-racing in KwaZulu-Natal and the
only jockey academy in South Africa.
‘The region is
midway between Durban and Pietermaritzburg and
close to Hillcrest. It offers country living,
but with the conveniences of town. Land sizes
can be two hectares (five acres) and upwards,
which is perfect for horse owners and
small-scale farmers,’ says Keith.
Smallholding
prices in Assagay start at around R1.9-million,
while entry-level prices are around R1.3-million
for 2 000m2 for residential property. In
Summerveld, prices range from R3.5- to
R10-million or even more. At Alverstone, the
smallest property is three hectares and
entry-level prices around R4-million.
To be sure, the
countryside here is KwaZulu-Natal at its
travel-brochure best. It features every possible
country life cliché you can imagine … sloping
green hills latticed with groves of pine, oak,
eucalyptus and jacaranda; verdant valleys
networked by rivers and streams; open
pastureland; great roller-coaster swathes of
sweeping sugar cane; farmhouses; farm stalls;
nurseries; bush bars; stables; riders on
horseback; a weekly farmers’ market – the works.
Potters and sculptors labour at their whirling
wheels; fish eagles and sparrow hawks soar on
thermal updrafts; rhino and buffalo snuffle
about the bush in the wilderness area near
Shongweni Dam, while each day at Summerveld the
rising sun silhouettes graceful racehorses on
the run. And in winter, when the cold air sweeps
in from the sea, the sky is a towering cathedral
of solid white cloud stretching to the far
horizon.
A rural idyll.
KwaZulu-Natal’s very own Camelot. But not for
very much longer.
The imminent
development of the area is the inevitable
knock-on effect of the development that’s
changed the region’s main town, Hillcrest, from
a smallholding with streetlights into a
traffic-clogged strip mall in less than a
decade.
The biggest news
is that the Tongaat Hulett Group, the company
that owns all that sugar cane, has freed up some
1 750 hectares of their fields to create what
could eventually become a brand-new town.
According to TC
Chetty, Director: Planning and Development
Coordination for Tongaat Hulett Developments (THD),
the project will entail a series of phases,
probably over the next ten years or so. Says TC:
‘Shongweni Phase 1 is planned as a residential
area, and the environmental impact assessment (EIA)
process is expected to go to the public early
this year. It will be situated in the Assagay
Valley, between Kassier Road and Hillcrest.
Future phases will be located between it and
Shongweni Dam.’
According to TC,
Shongweni will be THD’s trademark mixed-use
development, combining residential, commercial
and leisure aspects with some mixed-use blocks
and even buildings, and other areas set aside
for one specific use, possibly even urban
agriculture. He added that the creation of
permanent employment, not just during the
construction phase, is intrinsic to the
development model. TC is adamant that THD has no
intention of changing the area’s traditional
ambience and says the company will focus on job
creation, economic growth and environmental
sustainability.
‘Security is also
a key aspect of this sort of managed
environment. As with our other development
projects, Shongweni will feature buildings and
spaces designed to promote good visibility and
lighting, combined with CCTV monitoring, regular
patrols and a 24-hour communications centre,’
says TC.
So how does the
process work?
TC
explains: ‘THD works in partnership with the
municipality to ensure the relevant services and
infrastructure are in place. Mutual agreement
determines the extent of responsibility, as this
varies according to numerous factors, such as
whether the roads are private or public, and the
type of services and upgrades required.’
THD
does the planning, obtains the environmental
approvals and ensures the required services and
infrastructure are in place. Land is then sold
or leased to developers who build the projects
and are free to sell or let the properties. A
management association is formed for each
development to take care of the upkeep.
On the thorny
issue of potential environmental disruption, TC
says: ‘There are several aspects to the
environment. People often think purely of
“green” issues but a really sustainable
environment is much more than that and includes
human, economic and social considerations. At
Shongweni, we are mindful of the current
open-space ethic, as well as the existing
lifestyle that attracts people to the area.
Preserving sensitive areas is as vital as
anything else in such a project. Our
architectural guidelines will create an identity
for the development, ensure developments blend
in with the environment and help maintain the
lifestyle that is so much a part of it. In
addition, Shongweni will be integrated with
existing equestrian and recreational
facilities.’
TC,
along with other role-players in the region,
believes the Shongweni project will also help
ease the massive demand for land in
central Hillcrest.
While THD is keeping numbers and figures close
to its chest for now, a local resident who has
been party to the Shongweni plan since its
inception is more forthcoming. She’s Lilian
Develing, feisty chairman of the (take deep
breath) Confederation of Mistbelt Ratepayers and
Residents Associations, a.k.a. Conomirra.
Conomirra
is the region’s tireless watchdog. Driven by the
indefatigable Lilian, it’s been safeguarding the
interests of ratepayers for the past 13 years
and its guard-dog alertness to dodgy building
projects, dubious developments, ridiculous rates
hikes, wonky waste management, crime, corruption
and environmental degradation has undoubtedly
saved the Upper Highway from becoming an
unsightly industrial slum.
Says Lilian: ‘I
was invited to the initial planning exercises
with Tongaat Hulett’s development division (or
Moreland, as it was known then). First thing we
did was identify the environmental no-go areas.
For example, the area around the Msinsi Reserve
and Shongweni Dam has large areas of valleys,
forests, waterways and abundant wildlife.
‘The shopping
precinct will be mixed-use, with flats,
entertainment, business, shops – the lot. That
way the centre won’t die at night. It is ideal
as it will go up on the land between the N3
(that links Durban with the interior) and the
M13. Housing, light industry, recreation,
equestrian estates, tourist attractions have all
been looked at. The environmental guarantees are
in the Environmental Planning Regulations, NEMA
and municipal environmental policies. Also, the
N3 will be upgraded in time and a new toll is
being considered to finance this.’
According to Lilian, other new projects planned
for the region include a hospital on Kassier
Road in Assagay. ‘The EIA and zoning
(institutional) have gone through. They hope to
begin in March. Meanwhile, an application is in
for a retirement home and frail-care centre
across the road from the new hospital. This will
rise on the site of the old Hornby Lifestyle
Centre, which was sold recently for more than
R30-million. There’s also talk of a dry port at
Cato Ridge (further inland) to handle shipping
containers. And if the sea rises to the levels
predicted, the coastal refineries will have to
move inland as well.’
Meanwhile, Acutts
Hillcrest principal Dave Jones remarks:
‘Assagay, Alverstone, Shongweni and Summerveld
are all about specific lifestyle choices –
obviously, equestrian pursuits top the list, but
there are also those who simply want "life in
the country".
‘Summerveld is
horse heaven. The minimum plot size is five
acres. Five years ago, plots of that size cost
around R250 000. Today, even an unkempt plot
will range between R1.4- and R1.7-million, while
a level five-acre plot goes for between R2- and
R2.3-million. Building costs in Summerveld
average between R6- and R8-million for a
decent-sized home.
Jones continues:
‘Assagay offers a unique mix of suburban country
life, smallholdings and horse properties. All
these areas are characterised by exceptional
physical beauty. Green slopes, plentiful water,
swirling mist, healthy vegetables, chickens and
horses are all part of the blend.
‘Recently, there
has been a policy decision to slow down the
accelerating demand for gated communities. The
Outer West Council has now halted the rezoning
of agricultural land to residential usage for
the next five years. This means that
agricultural land plots are now never less than
two acres, with five acres and more the norm.
‘However, Assagay
also has easy freeway access and this has led to
two exciting residential developments. First of
these is Queensbridge Country Estate, which
already has 40 completed units and which focuses
on family life and security. The development was
launched four years ago and sold Natal-veranda
style units of 350m2 each at
R1-million. Now they’re going for R1.85-million.
Families with young children really feel secure
here and the old-fashioned activities of riding
your bike with your friends or making use of the
extensive communal recreation facilities are the
norm. These facilities are in an old quarry site
and include a huge rock swimming pool, heated
Jacuzzi, fishing dam, children’s playground and
entertainment pavilion. The estate also boasts
hiking trails and will offer 12 stables for
horses. As you can see, it’s all about
lifestyle.’
Jones reckons the
Alverstone area can be summed up in two words:
‘sought after.’ The major property attraction in
the area is Stoneford Equestrian Estate, a
fenced community with 24-hour security.
Bordering the Valley of a Thousand Hills, this
210-acre family estate will offer 57 freehold
sites with a minimum property size of 3 600m2
and a minimum house size of 300m2.
Plots will range from R1.45- to R2-million.
According to Jones
it will be a genuine equestrian paradise with 60
acres of paddocks, 60 stables and even indoor
and outdoor arenas. He says almost half the land
has been set aside as conservation and wetland
areas, including four stocked dams and extensive
outride trails.
As in any boom
market, people get a trifle greedy and prices
soar, sometimes unrealistically so. Zel
Singleton, Pam Golding Properties Hillcrest
principal, says, ‘Over the past three to five
years, there has been a property price
appreciation around the 500 per cent mark. Given
the rate of growth here, most sellers are asking
fair prices, but not always. Sellers need to
adjust their mindsets and realise the market has
swung back in favour of the buyer, who will no
longer pay inflated prices.’
Zel
believes the market will remain relatively quiet
at least until this month due to the Credit Act
and the Reserve Bank’s pre-Christmas rates hike.
But if you want
the real skinny on what’s going on in this
region, you need to talk to the doyenne of local
agents, the ineffable Di Apsey. Di runs her
eponymous agency from Gillitts and has been
operating in the Upper Highway area for 34
years. She offers an insider’s overview of the
area, explaining that Summerveld, Shongweni and
Alverstone are zoned as agricultural land and
therefore there is little commercial
development. Shongweni, however, is also zoned
for potential tourism use and Di says a British
couple recently bought a property, without
having seen it, from her and established a
successful boutique brewery. ‘Many phone calls
and pictures flew to and fro, but they never
actually saw it before the transfer was
registered,’ says Di.
She explains that
smallholdings predominate in Alverstone,
Shongweni and Summerveld and she has properties
ranging from R1.3- to R8-million on her books.
Assagay has a mixed bag, including plots of 1
800m2 (starting price R500 000),
high-density townhouses and a few smallholdings
in the valley.The latter are priced from R2.4-
to R5.6-million.
Twenty years ago,
city slickers still regarded Summerveld as the
outback, inhabited by wealthy Beverly
Hillbillies and eccentric equestrians. At the
time, recalls Di, most of the houses were not
the sort you’d find in the glossy pages of
Architectural Digest. ‘Some of them were
truly awful. I remember advertising one about 15
years ago as "The most HORRIBLE house I have
ever seen" (with the owners’ permission, of
course). Not long ago, it sold for R4.2-million.
Funnily enough, that advert attracted the most
response I’ve ever had.’
Di
happily reports that property sales are soaring
in her area and she’s sold at least 100
properties in the Summerveld-Assagay area, the
most recent a five-acre, R7.8-million Summerveld
property. Three years ago she’d sold that same
property for R2.7-million (a large sum at the
time, particularly for a shell on a bare plot).
She says Summerveld and Alverstone are so pricey
and in demand because they are relatively close
to town and the plots there are large.
‘Shongweni used to be very no-go because of its
proximity to townships and its accessibility but
that is starting to change. However, one needs
to be wary of potential land claims there,’ she
cautions.
Although she calls
the THD development ‘the next big thing in the
area’, she also says it remains to be seen how
much space they will leave for horses. ‘I think
they will do a Mount Edgcombe-type development,
but there is also an element of light industry
on the cards.’
Then there’s the
question of the long-established Durban
Shongweni Club. The polo and equestrian club is
on prime land at the entrance to Shongweni. Di
says it has been under very heavy pressure from
developers, but has so far fended off several
offers.
In a similar vein,
Conomirra’s Lilian says: ‘The Summerveld people
are getting jittery about their ability to have
outrides once the cane is gone. Technically,
they’ve been there by grace and favour and no
developer will put areas aside for their
neighbours – horsey or otherwise – and pay for
the maintenance.’
Lilian
says there’s talk of negotiations to relocate
the Durban Shongweni Club. ‘Their land is in
trust, but its constitution can be changed if
enough members agree. Tongaat Huletts’s TC
Chetty has said he will give them a piece of
land and build their infrastructure to the value
of any land given up. But nothing’s concrete.’
It’s obvious much
of the Upper Highway’s bucolic, laid-back
lifestyle has gone for good but Lilian believes
development is not out of control. ‘It is
meeting a demand. Over the years, the
municipality has faced the problem of expansion
running ahead of existing infrastructure. Now,
the authorities are planning all the way up to
2050 for the development of the region and, for
the past three years, the council has charged a
development fee of R10 000 per subdivision or
new housing unit. This has gone towards road
upgrades and sewerage systems.’
No matter how much
development is to take place, Lilian believes
the region’s country character will never be
totally lost. ‘This area is a convenient
springboard for the mountains or the coast and
there will still be plenty of "green lung" space
out here. Many developers now realise people
don’t want to live cheek by jowl and are
building estates that have space.’

Summerveld
Country Lodge –Summerhill Avenue – Summerveld
www.summerveldlodge.co.za
summerveldlodge@telkomsa.net
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