Table Bay harbour is now not the only port in Cape Town due for an upgrade, it was reported over the weekend that 13 harbours in Cape Town and the greater Western Cape will be getting multi-million rand facelifts.

The aim of the upgrades is to provide more job opportunities while at the same time making the harbours more pedestrian-friendly and productive. Development will start imminently and will continue until 2018 – with an estimated cost of R395 million involved.

Harbours in line for this upgrade are:

Hout Bay
St Helena Bay
Hermanus
Pepper Bay
Saldanha Bay
Gansbaai
Lambert’s Bay
Kalk Bay
Laaiplek Bay
Gordon’s Bay
Arniston
Struisbaai
Stilbaai

Read more here.

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9 Comments
  • Anthea Jill Jacobs Johnstone
    Anthea Jill Jacobs Johnstone
    September 7, 2015 at 9:08 am

    Achmat Cappy Johnstone

  • Marguerite van Niekerk
    Marguerite van Niekerk
    September 7, 2015 at 9:12 am

    Daniel Bekker

  • Zubair Suleiman
    Zubair Suleiman
    September 7, 2015 at 11:06 am

    Reyaan Gierdien

  • Nazeem Hartley Jumbo
    Nazeem Hartley Jumbo
    September 7, 2015 at 12:47 pm

    they jobs will be only until 2018, but the meter taxi drivers who’s been driving people in the harbor for more then 50 yrs will be loosing the jobs forever !!

  • John Steyn
    John Steyn
    September 7, 2015 at 2:48 pm

    Way overdue we can’t have ships waiting to refuel we need to look at our ports as a major source of income.

  • Thaabit Manan
    Thaabit Manan
    September 7, 2015 at 4:40 pm

    Veryan Bell

  • Clifford Patrick Evans
    Clifford Patrick Evans
    September 7, 2015 at 8:21 pm

    Hope that this includes the fishing harbours run by the Department of Agriculture Forest & Fisheries. There are more than 30 sunken trawlers in these harbours, more than 10 in Hout Bay alone which makes these harbours useless. There is only one slipway on the coast which can be used for repair work. The longer these wrecks remain in the water the more expensive to remove them and the less chance of recovering cost from salvage. Another government run fiasco.

  • Anette Du Preez
    Anette Du Preez
    September 8, 2015 at 7:39 pm

    I thought they were left there intentionally U0001f628

  • Clifford Patrick Evans
    Clifford Patrick Evans
    September 8, 2015 at 7:45 pm

    Nope, most were sunk by accident but the owners have just walked away because they can’t afford the salvage costs or because they weren’t insured. The problem is that most of these wrecks are alongside the quayside preventing other ships from docking.

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