Load-Shedding Area 15

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load-Shedding Area 15 MILNERTON LAGOON BEACH BO UND ARY TIJGERHOF SA A BLE G N A T A R E CENTURY CITY IN R A M METRO RUGBY SA B LE B N G R E B E O K ACACIA PARK YSTERPLAAT 1 N P IET GR OB LER KENSINGTON 1 BROOKLYN N S EC TIO N N1 Load-shedding FORESHORE PAARDEN EILAND Area 2 E N N1 RI A M D A ILAN L N E E E ARD D A P ER N EKK ORTR A VO M R KLERK E FW DE V N FW I DE LOWER C R O KLER H K S K U L C E R A N C L B Load-shedding H P R E Area 7 S T I G MAITLAND E C MUTS SALT RIVER A JAN S N ER N TREKK R O VOO N RC D I L RAN E ST ALBERT C Load-shedding BERKLEY ERKLEY SIR LOWR B Y Area 15 Y BERKLE AL WOODSTOCK BERT ER IV E R L VI LT M R C A TO SA D LTA A R IA U E R S EAR L H A L M I E M S E B DISTRICT SIX E O E L K N B EL E SO D MAITLAND GARDEN VILLAGE N O M A O N R D E B LA L A A L C E X K A R N I V D E R R A N ION TO TAT MIL S PINELANDS IP KGOSA VREDEHOEK HIL NA P G OBSERVATORY IN ST N E W R B R O FO ILIP KGO PH SA NA Load-shedding P Area 9 H I L I P K G O S A N A S E T RS T TLE L T E SE R S Swartland RG 14 NBE APE RA DURBAN S R E T ST PE Drakenstein SETTLERS 14 ES D O RS H K MOWBRAY TTLE R R SE O M B O O Load-shedding M PK Area 5 Y TABLE M6 OUNTAIN KEWTOWN Table ROSEBANK J A Bay N Atlantic 2 13 10 WO OLSA K S CK LI HAZENDAL M Ocean 1 PF O Load-shedding U N 15 Stellenbosch T T E S 7 9 IN Area 12 12 5 L 22 IE S SYBRAND PARK 21 23 B E 11 E K S D M E N I D PARK L U Hout Bay 16 4 17 O N H T O E 17 R N R R 17 3 MO BEL G P M A Theewaterskloof C 8 Gordon's Bay False RONDEBOSCH Bay N I A M ATHLONE Overstrand Load-shedding Areas D Y N K U P K LIPP O ER R M G O P O B Please Note: N M O A R M I E - Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of information in this map at the time of publication . S O N C N U D L R - The spatial data portrayed in this map is as current, accurate and complete as provided by theN various line departments I A K responsible for the maintenance of these datasets. L M EW RONDEBOSCH EAST - The City of Cape Town accepts no responsibility for, and will not be liable for, any errors oNr omissions contained herein. NEWLANDS Load-shedding WYNBERG NU NEWLANDS NEWLANDS Area 5 THIS MAP WAS COMPILED BY: Legend Railways Major Roads Other Roads CITY MAPS Standing Waterbodies Biodiversity Networks Information & Knowledge Management Intermittent Waterbodies Load-shedding Areas Feb 2021 F Load-shedding 0 137.5 275 550 825 CCT Load-shedding Areas Eskom Load-shedding Areas Contact Information: Tel: +27 21 487 2711 Feb 2021 Feb 2021 Meters Area 15 Fax: 086 202 8439 1 5 9 13 17 22 1:25 000 [email protected] 2 6 10 14 21 23 Please The load-shedding areas, as indicated note: on the map, is an estimation of this City of Cape Town Date: February 2021 3 7 11 15 Eskom customer areas. Affected areas may supplied vary on occassion due to operational Job Number: 2021_46 4 8 12 16 requirements..
Recommended publications
  • An Initial Archaeological Assessment of Bloubergstrand
    AN INITIAL ARCHAEOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT OF BLOUBERGSTRAND (FOR STRUCTURE PLAN PURPOSES ONLY) Prepared for Steyn Larsen and Partners December 1992 Prepared by Archaeology Contracts Office Department of Archaeology University of Cape Town Rondebosch 7700 Phone (021) 650 2357 Fax (021) 650 2352 1. INTRODUCTION The purpose of this report has been to identify areas of archaeological sensitivity in an area of Bloubergstrand as part of a local structure plan being compiled by Steyn, Larsen and Partners, Town and Regional Planners on behalf of the Western Cape Regional Services Council. The area of land which is examined is presented in Figure 1. Our brief specifically requested that we not undertake any detailed site identification. The conclusions reached are the result of an in loco inspection of the area and reference to observations compiled by members of the Archaeological Field Club1 during a visit to the area in 1978. While these records are useful they are not comprehensive and inaccuracies may be present. 2. BACKGROUND Human occupation of the coast and exploitation of marine resources was practised for many thousands of years before the colonisation of southern Africa by Europeans. This practise continued for some time after colonisation as well. Archaeological sites along the coast are often identified by the scatters of marine shells (middens) which accumulated at various places, sometimes in caves and rockshelters, but very often out in the open. Other food remains such as bones from a variety of faunas will often accompany the shells showing that the early inhabitants utilised the full range of resources of the coastal zone.
    [Show full text]
  • Load-Shedding Area 7
    MOUILLE POINT GREEN POINT H N ELEN SUZMA H EL EN IN A SU M Z M A H N C THREE ANCHOR BAY E S A N E E I C B R TIO H A N S E M O L E M N E S SEA POINT R U S Z FORESHORE E M N T A N EL SO N PAARDEN EILAND M PA A A B N R N R D D S T I E E U H E LA N D R B H AN F C EE EIL A K ER T BO-KAAP R T D EN G ZO R G N G A KLERK E E N FW DE R IT R U A B S B TR A N N A D IA T ST S R I AN Load-shedding D D R FRESNAYE A H R EKKER L C Area 15 TR IN A OR G LBERT WOODSTOCK VO SIR LOWRY SALT RIVER O T R A N R LB BANTRY BAY A E TAMBOERSKLOOF E R A E T L V D N I R V R N I U M N CT LT AL A O R G E R A TA T E I E A S H E S ARL K S A R M E LIE DISTRICT SIX N IL F E V V O D I C O T L C N K A MIL PHILIP E O M L KG L SIGNAL HILL / LIONS HEAD P O SO R SAN I A A N M A ND G EL N ON A I ILT N N M TIO W STA O GARDENS VREDEHOEK R B PHILI P KGOSA OBSERVATORY NA F P O H CLIFTON O ORANJEZICHT IL L IP K K SANA R K LO GO E O SE F T W T L O E S L R ER S TL SET MOWBRAY ES D Load-shedding O RH CAMPS BAY / BAKOVEN Area 7 Y A ROSEBANK B L I S N WOO K P LSACK M A C S E D O RH A I R O T C I V RONDEBOSCH TABLE MOUNTAIN Load-shedding Area 5 KLIP PER N IO N S U D N A L RONDEBOSCH W E N D N U O R M G NEWLANDS IL L P M M A A A C R I Y N M L PA A R A P AD TE IS O E R P R I F 14 Swartland RIA O WYNBERG NU T C S I E V D CLAREMONT O H R D WOO BOW Drakenstein E OUDEKRAAL 14 D IN B U R G BISHOPSCOURT H RH T OD E ES N N A N Load-shedding 6 T KENILWORTH Area 11 Table Bay Atlantic 2 13 10 T Ocean R 1 O V 15 A Stellenbosch 7 9 T O 12 L 5 22 A WETTO W W N I 21 L 2S 3 A I A 11 M T E O R S L E N O D Hout Bay 16 4 O V 17 O A H 17 N I R N 17 A D 3 CONSTANTIA M E WYNBERG V R I S C LLANDUDNO T Theewaterskloof T E O 8 L Gordon's R CO L I N L A STA NT Bay I HOUT BAY IA H N ROCKLEY False E M H Bay P A L A I N MAI N IA Please Note: T IN N A G - Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of information in this map at the time of puMblication .
    [Show full text]
  • Cape Town's Failure to Redistribute Land
    CITY LEASES CAPE TOWN’S FAILURE TO REDISTRIBUTE LAND This report focuses on one particular problem - leased land It is clear that in order to meet these obligations and transform and narrow interpretations of legislation are used to block the owned by the City of Cape Town which should be prioritised for our cities and our society, dense affordable housing must be built disposal of land below market rate. Capacity in the City is limited redistribution but instead is used in an inefficient, exclusive and on well-located public land close to infrastructure, services, and or non-existent and planned projects take many years to move unsustainable manner. How is this possible? Who is managing our opportunities. from feasibility to bricks in the ground. land and what is blocking its release? How can we change this and what is possible if we do? Despite this, most of the remaining well-located public land No wonder, in Cape Town, so little affordable housing has been owned by the City, Province, and National Government in Cape built in well-located areas like the inner city and surrounds since Hundreds of thousands of families in Cape Town are struggling Town continues to be captured by a wealthy minority, lies empty, the end of apartheid. It is time to review how the City of Cape to access land and decent affordable housing. The Constitution is or is underused given its potential. Town manages our public land and stop the renewal of bad leases. clear that the right to housing must be realised and that land must be redistributed on an equitable basis.
    [Show full text]
  • Special Schools
    Province District Name PrimaryDisability Postadd1 PhysAdd1 Telephone Numbers Fax Numbers Cell E_Mail No. of Learners No. of Educators Western Cape Metro South Education District Agape School For The CP CP & Physical disability P.O. Box23, Mitchells Plain, 7785 Cnr Sentinel and Yellowwood Tafelsig, Mitchells Plain 213924162 213925496 [email protected] 213 23 Western Cape Metro Central Education District Alpha School Autism Spectrum Dis order P.O Box 48, Woodstock, 7925 84 Palmerston Road Woodstock 214471213 214480405 [email protected] 64 12 Western Cape Metro East Education District Alta Du Toit School Intellectual disability Private Bag x10, Kuilsriver, 7579 Piet Fransman Street, Kuilsriver 7580 219034178 219036021 [email protected] 361 30 Western Cape Metro Central Education District Astra School For Physi Physical disability P O Box 21106, Durrheim, 7490 Palotti Road, Montana 7490 219340155 219340183 0835992523 [email protected] 321 35 Western Cape Metro North Education District # Athlone School For The Blind Visual Impairment Private BAG x1, Kasselsvlei Athlone Street Beroma, Bellville South 7533 219512234 219515118 0822953415 [email protected] 363 38 Western Cape Metro North Education District Atlantis School Of Skills MMH Private Bag X1, Dassenberg, Atlantis, 7350 Gouda Street Westfleur, Atlantis 7349 0215725022/3/4 215721538 [email protected] 227 15 Western Cape Metro Central Education District Batavia Special School MMH P.O Box 36357, Glosderry, 7702 Laurier Road Claremont 216715110 216834226
    [Show full text]
  • The History of Rondebosch Common a Plaque on a Stone at the South­ Cape Once Again
    An Oa~i~ ~ A YQSt of flowQting or by Betty Dwight and Joanne Eastman, 1 ondebosch Common was declared a National Monument in 1961, thereby preserving, Runintentionally, a small piece of Cape Flats flora 'sand plain fynbos', of which so little remains, in the southern suburbs of Cape Town. Standing in the middle of the Common, surrounded by busy roads, one can still feel a sense of peace as the noise of the cars fade in the background. On closer inspection, with eyes turned to the ground, a wonderful miniature world of flowers, insects, birds and butterflies opens up. It is truly an oasis of wildness within the city. In January amongst the dry grass there are little patches of yellow Lobelia, Monopsis lutea. The African Monarch butterfly with its russet brown wings, tipped with black and white, flutters around the papery white Helichrysum flowers. Blue Aristea are flowering. This Aristea is taller with a strap-like stem compared to the Aristea africana seen in September. A few white Roella prostrata straggle along the ground. The Psoralea pinnata shrubs with their pale mauve flowers appear bravely in the dry season. Even in hot February there is something to find. The Struthiola shrublets are covered in small creamy, sometimes pale pink flowers. The restios stand out amongst the yellow grass with their green stems and dark brown flower heads. There are also many interesting seed-pods beginning to form. Grasshoppers, dragonflies and the Citrus Swallowtail butterflies are evident. In March the large black ants are on the move, very busy carrying seeds to their nests.
    [Show full text]
  • Applications
    APPLICATIONS PUBLICATIONS AREAS BUSINESS NAMES AUGUST 2021 02 09 16 23 30 INC Observatory, Rondebosch East, Lansdowne, Newlands, Rondebosch, Rosebank, Mowbray, Bishopscourt, Southern Suburbs Tatler Claremont, Sybrand Park, Kenilworth, Pinelands, Kenwyn, BP Rosemead / PnP Express Rosemead Grocer's Wine 26 Salt River, Woodstock, University Estate, Walmer Estate, Fernwood, Harfield, Black River Park Hazendal, Kewtown, Bridgetown, Silvertown, Rylands, Newfields, Gatesville, Primrose Park, Surrey Estate, Heideveld, Athlone News Shoprite Liquorshop Vangate 25 Pinati, Athlone, Bonteheuwel, Lansdowne, Crawford, Sherwood Park, Bokmakierie, Manenberg, Hanover Park, Vanguard Deloitte Cape Town Bantry Bay, Camps Bay, Clifton, De Waterkant, Gardens, Green Point, Mouille Point, Oranjezicht, Schotsche Kloof, Cape Town Wine & Spirits Emporium Atlantic Sun 26 Sea Point, Tamboerskloof, Three Anchor Bay, Vredehoek, V & A Marina Accommodation Devilspeak, Zonnebloem, Fresnaye, Bakoven Truman and Orange Bergvliet, Diep River, Tokai, Meadowridge, Frogmore Estate, Southfield, Flintdale Estate, Plumstead, Constantia, Wynberg, Kirstenhof, Westlake, Steenberg Golf Estate, Constantia Village, Checkers Liquorshop Westlake Constantiaberg Bulletin 26 Silverhurst, Nova Constantia, Dreyersdal, Tussendal, John Collins Wines Kreupelbosch, Walloon Estate, Retreat, Orchard Village, Golf Links Estate Blouberg, Table View, Milnerton, Edgemead, Bothasig, Tygerhof, Sanddrift, Richwood, Blouberg Strand, Milnerton Ridge, Summer Greens, Melkbosstrand, Flamingo Vlei, TableTalk Duynefontein,
    [Show full text]
  • Activism in Manenberg, 1980 to 2010
    Then and Now: Activism in Manenberg, 1980 to 2010 Julian A Jacobs (8805469) University of the Western Cape Supervisor: Prof Uma Dhupelia-Mesthrie Masters Research Essay in partial fulfillment of Masters of Arts Degree in History November 2010 DECLARATION I declare that „Then and Now: Activism in Manenberg, 1980 to 2010‟ is my own work and that all the sources I have used or quoted have been indicated and acknowledged by means of complete references. …………………………………… Julian Anthony Jacobs i ABSTRACT This is a study of activists from Manenberg, a township on the Cape Flats, Cape Town, South Africa and how they went about bringing change. It seeks to answer the question, how has activism changed in post-apartheid Manenberg as compared to the 1980s? The study analysed the politics of resistance in Manenberg placing it within the over arching mass defiance campaign in Greater Cape Town at the time and comparing the strategies used to mobilize residents in Manenberg in the 1980s to strategies used in the period of the 2000s. The thesis also focused on several key figures in Manenberg with a view to understanding what local conditions inspired them to activism. The use of biographies brought about a synoptic view into activists lives, their living conditions, their experiences of the apartheid regime, their brutal experience of apartheid and their resistance and strength against a system that was prepared to keep people on the outside. This study found that local living conditions motivated activism and became grounds for mobilising residents to make Manenberg a site of resistance. It was easy to mobilise residents on issues around rent increases, lack of resources, infrastructure and proper housing.
    [Show full text]
  • ANNUAL REPORT APRIL 2013–MARCH 2014 Vision: the Creation of Sustainable Human Settlements Through Development Processes Which Enable Human Rights, Dignity and Equity
    ANNUAL REPORT APRIL 2013–MARCH 2014 Vision: The creation of sustainable human settlements through development processes which enable human rights, dignity and equity. Mission: To create, implement and support opportunities for community-centred settlement development and to advocate for and foster a pro-poor policy environment which addresses economic, social and spatial imbalances. Umzomhle (Nyanga), Mncediisi Masakhane, RR Section, Participatory Action Planning CONTENTS ABBREVIATIONS ANC African National Congress KCT Khayelitsha Community Trust BESG Built Environment Support Group KDF Khayelitsha Development Forum Abbreviations 2 BfW Brot für die Welt KHP Khayelitsha Housing Project CBO Community-Based Organisation KHSF Khayelitsha Human Settlements Our team 3 CLP Community Leadership Programme Forum Board of Directors 4 CoCT City of Cape Town (Metropolitan) LED Local economic development Chairperson’s report 5 CORC Community Organisation Resource LRC Legal Resources Centre Centre MIT Massachusetts Institute of Executive Director’s report 6 CBP Capacity-Building Programme Technology From vision to strategy 9 CPUT Cape Peninsula University of NDHS National Department of Human Technology Settlements Affordable housing and human settlements 15 CSO Civil Society Organisation NGO Non-Governmental Organisation Building capacity in the urban sector 20 CTP Cape Town Partnership NDP National Development Plan Partnerships 23 DA Democratic Alliance NUSP National Upgrading Support DAG Development Action Group Programme Institutional change 25 DPU
    [Show full text]
  • The Chesterfield Brand New Development, Rondebosch
    THE CHESTERFIELD BRAND NEW DEVELOPMENT, RONDEBOSCH THE NOVA GROUP PROPERTY DEVELOPMENT & CONSTRUCTION HEAD OFFICE 021 433 2580 SEA POINT 021 434 1223 dogongroup.com A visionary company with decades of experience COMPANY PARTICULARS Established by our CEO, Denise Dogon in 2002, Dogon Group Properties has proven to be a true real estate success story. The Dogon name has become synonymous with the proficient and effective marketing and selling of premium grade properties in Cape Town and particularly the sought-after Atlantic Seaboard. Dogon Group currently have offices in high profile positions in the City Bowl, Sea Point, Southern Suburbs and Gauteng. Dogon Group Properties prides itself on its unique and focused approach to marketing and sales, providing a comprehensive and tailored solution to ensure that sales occur at the optimum price within a compressed space of time. The company utilizes an evolved and distinctive sales force of highly adept and skilled sales agents who are selected for their extensive experience, professionalism and successful track records. Headed by CEO, Denise Dogon (Head of Marketing) and Managing Director Alexa Horne, Dogon Group has a dedicated in- house marketing department ensuring that focused and specialized marketing strategies are implemented. The powerful proprietary Dogon Group database combined with its eye-catching and prominent advertising, both in print and digital media, together with our visible network of sales offices support our strong performance on the Western Cape’s Atlantic Seaboard,
    [Show full text]
  • A History of the Ottery School of Industries in Cape Town: Issues of Race, Welfare and Social Order in the Period 1937 to 1968
    University of the Western Cape Faculty of Education A History of the Ottery School of Industries in Cape Town: Issues of Race, Welfare and Social Order in the period 1937 to 1968 By Nur-Mohammed Azeem Badroodien A thesis presented in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Faculty of Education, University of the Western Cape March 2001 2 Abstract The primary task of this thesis is to explain the establishment of the ‘correctional institution’, the Ottery School of Industries, in Cape Town in 1948 and the programmes of rehabilitation, correctional and vocational training and residential care that the institution developed in the period until 1968. This explanation is located in the wider context of debates about welfare and penal policy in South Africa. The overall purpose is to show how modernist discourses in relation to social welfare, delinquency, and education came to South Africa and was mediated through a racial lens unique to this country. In so doing the thesis uses a broad range of material and levels of analysis from the ethnographic to the documentary and historical. The work seeks to locate itself at the intersection of the fields of education, history, welfare, penality and race in South Africa. The unique contribution of the study lies in the ways in which it engages with the nature of welfare institutions that took the form of Schools of Industries in the apartheid period. The thesis asserts that the motivation for the development of the institution under apartheid was not just the extension of crude apartheid policy, but was also inspired by welfarist and humanitarian goals.
    [Show full text]
  • From Gqogqora to Liberation: the Struggle Was My Life
    FROM GQOGQORA TO LIBERATION: THE STRUGGLE WAS MY LIFE The Life Journey of Zollie Malindi Edited by Theodore Combrinck & Philip Hirschsohn University of the Western Cape in association with Diana Ferrus Publishers IN THE SAME SERIES Married to the Struggle: ‘Nanna’ Liz Abrahams Tells her Life Story, edited by Yusuf Patel and Philip Hirschsohn. Published by the University of the Western Cape. Zollie Malindi defies his banning order in 1989 (Fruits of Defiance, B. Tilley & O. Schmitz 1990) First published in 2006 by University of the Western Cape Modderdam Road Bellville 7535 South Africa © 2006 Zolile (Zollie) Malindi All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission in writing from the copyright owner. Front and back cover illustrations by Theodore Combrinck. ISBN 0-620-36478-5 Editors: Theodore Combrinck and Philip Hirschsohn This book is available from the South African history online website: www.sahistory.org.za Printed and bound by Printwize, Bellville CONTENTS Acknowledgements Preface – Philip Hirschsohn and Theodore Combrinck Foreword – Trevor Manuel ZOLLIE MALINDI’S LIFE STORY 1 From a Village near Tsomo 2 My Struggle with Employment 3 Politics in Cape Town 4 Involvement in Unions 5 Underground Politics 6 Banned, Tortured, Jailed 7 Employment at Woolworths 8 Political Revival in the 1980s 9 Retirement and Reflections Bibliography ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Special thanks to Graham Goddard, of the Robben Island Museum’s Mayibuye Archive located at the University of the Western Cape, for locating photographic and video material.
    [Show full text]
  • City of Cape Town Profile
    2 PROFILE: CITY OF CAPETOWN PROFILE: CITY OF CAPETOWN 3 Contents 1. Executive Summary ........................................................................................... 4 2. Introduction: Brief Overview ............................................................................. 8 2.1 Location ................................................................................................................................. 8 2.2 Historical Perspective ............................................................................................................ 9 2.3 Spatial Status ....................................................................................................................... 11 3. Social Development Profile ............................................................................. 12 3.1 Key Social Demographics ..................................................................................................... 12 3.1.1 Population ............................................................................................................................ 12 3.1.2 Gender Age and Race ........................................................................................................... 13 3.1.3 Households ........................................................................................................................... 14 3.2 Health Profile ....................................................................................................................... 15 3.3 COVID-19 ............................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]