Showing posts with label construction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label construction. Show all posts

Asia-Pacific Housing Forum - moladi

Asia-Pacific Housing Forum - Homepage






> OVERVIEW

Building on each other’s strengths
More than one billion people around the world live in urban slums and this figure is rising as towns and cities continue to expand. The 2nd Asia-Pacific Housing Forum will examine and propose concrete solutions for housing the urban poor and for dealing with existing slums. The forum will look at alternative approaches and scalable models involving national and local government authorities, businesses and social organizations working together and building on each other’s strengths to provide housing solutions.
Slums are particularly vulnerable to fire, floods and other disasters. The forum will provide a venue where major players and stakeholders in relief and development can explore strategies to bridge the gaps between emergency relief and sustainable redevelopment.

> WHO SHOULD ATTEND

The Forum is of interest to all who are concerned and engaged in providing urban poverty housing solutions like architects, academics, developers, urban planners, policymakers, NGOs, donor agencies, researchers, private and public sector actors. We invite you to join us at the September 2009 2nd Asia-Pacific Housing Forum in Manila, Philippines to:
present a research paper or case study;
participate in a dialogue or panel discussion;
showcase your initiative or project;
join a training event;
engage in a “Leaders of Today & Tomorrow” session;
be a participant.

moladi is proud and honoured to present our construction technology “The Moladi Approach to Affordable Housing Delivery”

moladi establishes construction training skills college


The backlog of houses in South Africa and the huge unemployment rate has prompted moladi to establish moladiCOLLEGE. The focus of moladiCOLLEGE will be to create employment and develop skills, creating an opportunity for Government to make good on its promise to deliver housing and create employment. moladiCOLLEGE has partnered with CETA (Construction Education and Training Authority) and Services SETA to train veterans


For more information visit www.moladiCOLLEGE.co.za

Affordable housing shortage 'stifles market'

Affordable housing shortage 'stifles market' - South Africa

Lack of affordable housing was a major obstacle to sustained demand in the housing sector and could lead to the slowing of house price growth to single digits later this year, a property group said yesterday."Without growing demand, price growth will decline," Harcourts Africa said. Chief executive Martin Schultheiss said the South African market's greatest need was in the essential buying category. "People need an affordable roof over their heads, as opposed to leisure or speculative buying."It was not only essential that greater volumes of affordable units were brought to market, not only for prospective owner-buyers but also for the affordable rental market, where better stock levels would spur greater investment."The household sector remains under pressure, with the latest figures showing the ratio of debt to disposable income still at nearly 80 percent," Schultheiss said. While this painted a rather bleak picture for prospective home owners, especially at the lowest end of the market, it also meant that they would be looking for affordable rental homes if they could not muster the finances to buy their own.

"Developers would do well to take note of this need and adapt development plans to cater for this sector."Although affordability is a common denominator, property investors are also looking for additional features - and developers who want to tap into this market should take heed."Schultheiss said investors wanted compact properties with easy access and hard-wearing surfaces for easy maintenance. "Tenants typically occupy units for an average of two years and landlords are keen to keep refurbishment costs to a minimum at the end of a lease period."Investors might also prefer built-in appliances and pre-paid meters for electricity. "And of course affordable units with low maintenance requirements would find favour among owner-buyers too," he added.

Keywords: - affordable housing, house price growth, development, affordable rental homes, South Africa, property investors, property group, moladi, formwork, construction, market, reduce

moladi supports 1GOAL: Education for All campaign

moladi supports 1GOAL: Education for All campaign: "moladi supports 1GOAL: Education for All campaign"

Moladi is supporting the new 1GOAL: Education for All campaign, aimed at making the right to receive an education a reality for every child.
The global campaign is calling on world leaders to provide education for 72 million children worldwide by 2015.
1GOAL is seizing the power of football to ensure that education for all is a lasting impact of the 2010 FIFA World Cup, the first in Africa.
Footballers, fans and FIFA are behind 1GOAL, along with education champions, charities and campaigners. Moladi is supporting the campaign through its partnership with the Global Campaign for Education – with development agencies around the world united in their determination to achieve universal education.
Poverty reduction
Of the eight Millennium Development Goals agreed by world leaders in 2000, two involve ending poverty through education, including ensuring that all children complete primary schooling by 2015.
While some progress has been made in this area – an extra 33 million children are now going to school, thanks to initiatives such as the abolition of school fees in many countries – the goal will not be reached without increased action now.

"Not only does it open up economic opportunity and contribute to poverty reduction, it literally does save lives. Children of mothers who receive an education are twice as likely to live beyond age five."

Keywords: moladi, supports 1GOAL: Education for All campaign, classrooms, schools, aid, shelter, children, poverty, building, construction, rural, FIFA, world Cup, soccer, football

Defence force bill for veterans mounts - Training skills development

BusinessDay - Defence force bill for veterans mounts:

CARING for military veterans of the anti- apartheid struggle could cost the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) more than expected, says Deputy Defence Minister Thabang Makwetla .
This comes after a task team, set up by Defence Minister Lindiwe Sisulu to create an institution to cater for military veterans, received presentations from various groups asking that the plight of their former struggle heroes be addressed and their names added to the list of military veterans.
Makwetla, who is chairing the task team, says presentations have come from all segments of the community who were involved in the fight against apartheid.
Sisulu’s action is the result of a resolution at the Africa National Congress’s (ANC’s) Polokwane conference in December 2007. It claimed that the provisions of the Military Veterans Act of 1999 that established the veterans’ directorate in the Department of Defence were insufficient and did not cater for all veterans’ groups.
Makwetla says some people feel that the incorporation of various armed forces into the SANDF after 1994 may have left some liberation movement members destitute.
These include Umkhonto weSizwe of the ANC, the Azanian People’s Liberation Army — the military wing of the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC), and the Azanian National Liberation Army (Azanla) — the Azanian People’s Organisation’s (Azapo’s) armed wing.
Since Azapo did not recognise the outcome of the Codesa negotiation process, it forbade Azanla to be one of the liberation forces to be merged with the old SADF into the new national defence force.
While SANDF soldiers are catered for under normal human resource regulations, including pensions, these former struggle soldiers and others are facing unique challenges that the task team must consider.
Some soldiers from the old SADF, especially from units such as the South West African Territory Force and Koevoet — which fought in Namibia and Angola and were disbanded by the De Klerk government, want to be included as they regard themselves as legitimate soldiers of the state at the time.
“Then there are also armies of erstwhile TBVC states (Transkei, Bophuthatswana, Venda and Ciskei) that should need help,” says Makwetla.
“There is also a group which participated in and survived the two world wars and the Korean conflict that was unevenly compensated on various grounds including racism. They, equally, deserve recognition, like their peers,” he says.
“We are been called on to also look at how the state can help those who fought in the township conflicts — especially between what was described as Inkatha Freedom Party-aligned self-protection units and the ANC or United Democratic Front-aligned self-defence units,” Makwetla says.
“One expected that these issues were clearly defined and resolved during the integration process more than 10 years ago, but the task team does not wish to leave certain matters unresolved, with noises on the sidelines that could end up discrediting the process.
“We are revisiting these matters and finding out why there is still an outcry, and how they could be resolved once and for all,” he says.
With regard to the Azanla and Koevoet units, the task team would present its argument and recommendations to the Cabinet for a final decision. On various township defence units, a researched document would also be compiled and recommendations, based on social development necessities, would be submitted to the Cabinet. “Because they were not trained soldiers, they do not fall under the defence ministry,” he says.
Makwetla says in finding solutions that would alleviate poverty and improve the living conditions of former liberation fighters, the task team will seek to avoid creating an impression that the group is more privileged than ordinary poor South Africans.
“The team must strike a balance such that we do not create a problem of envy of soldiers from any military or political background by ordinary communities who fought tough battles in the townships against the apartheid security forces,” he says.
“This is a special situation about short-term needs that will be addressed with the help and the co- operation of other departments within the social development cluster such as human settlements, social development, health and even labour’s special skills training programmes,” Makwetla says.
Asked what was the likely long- term solution, he says the task team believes that all state soldiers will be adequately catered for “through an all-encompassing defence force human resource policy framework” that will look at building and securing their lives “from recruitment to retirement to the grave”.
Makwetla says a draft document addressing all these issues would be discussed at the stakeholders’ forum involving related state departments, non governmental organisations, policy institutions, civil society and parties next month.

This is what we have requested the Minister to recognize - Training veterans to build moladi houses...

Low cost housing - south africa

Low cost housing - Community failed by two municipalities

The residents of the Popo Molefe informal settlement in Rietfontein have been forgotten. Services in this settlement are non-existant and two municipalities have thus far failed to deliver houses where the residents can live away from the sewage plant that they have had as a neighbour since 1996. Some of the residents of the informal settlement last week questioned the fact that the houses at the Refentse Low Cost Housing Project have not been completed and the fact that they are still living in squalor. The residents spoke to officials of the Madibeng municipality last Thursday and the officials asked to meet the residents at Refentse at 8:00 on Friday morning. The officials only arrived at 10:30. The Popo Molefe residents were refused access to the property and the officials then held a meeting inside before walking straight past the residents and left, without explaining why or the situation with the houses. This left the residents with even more unanswered questions. Sam Maenetje and Tsepo Patric, two residents of the informal settlement who were at the Refentse Low Cost Housing Project on Friday morning told Kormorant that they are in urgent need of honest answers on the situation with the houses. They said that they had been moved to the Popo Molefe Molefe informal settlement in 1996 by the previous municipality with the promise that they will only stay there temporarily while appropriate land is sought and houses built. The old Hartbeespoort council was then amalgamated with the Brits council to form the Madibeng Local Municipality in 2000 and the situation changed again. Maenetje and Patric said that they put their names on the beneficiary list for low cost housing at Refentse in 2002 and have been waiting since then for proper houses. “The situation at Popo Molefe is not right. There is water but there are no toilets. The water runs through the houses,” Patric said. According to them there are now approximately 3000 people living in the informal settlement and it is not safe to live there. They said that people are dying in the settlement due to the living conditions. “If they can just give us a stand with a yard. We will build our own houses,” Maenetje told Kormorant.Mr. Patrick Morathi, the spokesperson for the Local Municipality of Madibeng, said previously that although eight families had been moved into houses at Refentse there were no plans to relocate more families to the houses in the near future. The municipality was awaiting the completion of a forensic audit by the Department of Local Government and Housing and the NHBRC before the project could be completed. In reaction to Kormorant’s latest enquiry, Morathi said that 150 houses at the project are now complete but that the forensic investigation found that there are some houses which need corrections and some need to be completely demolished. “We must however indicate that this was a process done between Province and NHBRC and the report thereof has not yet been officially presented to the municipality,” Morathi said. He said that the allocation of houses will continue once the matter of the status of the project has been clarified with the provincial department. According to him the original plan was for 1000 units but first had to be scaled down to 500 because of the unavailability of land in the area. “After acquiring the property where Refentse is now, Environmental Impact Studies performed concluded that a portion of the property is in a Magaliesberg Natural Protected area and as such scaled down the project to 167 out of the planned 500 while we have over 400 beneficiary approvals. The approved beneficiaries as well as others will be accommodated in the project called Sunway Village Development in Rietfontein which has been approved by the municipality and the Department of Human Settlements NW to accommodate 1000 low cost houses,” Morathi said. He said that the Refentse Low Cost Housing Project has been faced with a number of challenges. This included the problems with acceptance of the development by residents of Rietfontein and surrounding area in finalizing the township establishment process which calls for public inputs. The same was a problem in finalizing the EIA processes because of a number of objections received and having to go through a number of processes before finalizing these matters as a legal requirement.

Bill Drayton — Social Edge - moladi housing the POOR

Bill Drayton — Social Edge

Social entrepreneurship - the practice of responding to market failures with transformative and financially sustainable innovations aimed at solving social problems. Transformative InnovationsAshoka Founder Bill Drayton has famously commented that “social entrepreneurs are not content just to give a fish or teach how to fish. They will not rest until they have revolutionized the fishing industry.” Like other entrepreneurs, social entrepreneurs are creative thinkers, continuously striving for innovation, which can involve new technologies, supply sources, distribution outlets, or methods of production. Innovation may also mean starting new organizations, or offering new products or services. Innovative ideas can be completely new inventions or creative adaptations of existing ones. Many scholars take this focus on innovation even further. Social entrepreneurs are “change agents,” creating “large-scale change through pattern-breaking ideas,” “addressing the root causes” of social problems, possessing “the ambition to create systemic change by introducing a new idea and persuading others to adopt it,” and changing “the social systems that create and maintain” problems. These types of transformative changes can be national or global. They can also often be highly localized—but no less powerful—in their impact. Most often, social entrepreneurs who create transformative changes combine innovative practices, deep and targeted knowledge of their social issue area, applied and cutting-edge research, and political savvy to reach their goals. For all entrepreneurs, whether in the business or social realm, innovation is not a one-time event—but continues over time. Of course, while addressing a social problem with a potentially transformative innovation is an essential component of the definition of social entrepreneurship offered here, succeeding in generating such transformation is not. The field, like any other, includes success stories and strong leaders, as well as those who fall short of their aspirations. Nonetheless, the definition of social entrepreneurship requires that initiatives at least have the potential for transformative social innovation on a local, national, or global scale. This characteristic distinguishes social entrepreneurship from other nonprofit, business, or government service providers that may be more narrowly focused on meeting the most pressing social needs as they emerge.

moladi - http://www.moladi.net/

Low cost housing - Bisho spends R360 million to fix broken homes


Daily Dispatch Online

2009/07/30

BHISHO is spending R360 million to fix nearly 20 000 broken homes in the province while the poor live in flimsy cardboard units and ghost towns emerge from the ruins of disastrous housing projects.
In some areas of the province communities have deserted formal housing settlements because the homes were so poorly built they cannot live in them any longer.
The number of homes having to be repaired is more than the total number of 19662 houses delivered in the 2006/2007 financial year.
While the provincial government tries to rein in its backlog of 800 000 RDP homes, a two-month investigation by the Dispatch has revealed how:
Homes were built in areas which people have long since left;
One project in Seymour became State-sponsored “holiday homes” for people who live in other cities and only return in December;
Residents in Burgersdorp were moved into cardboard houses when their RDP homes began falling to the ground, and were then asked to clean up the mess themselves;
One project of 600 homes in Tarkastad has been standing empty, while a waiting list to house people continues to grow;
Depopulation and inferior construction in places like Venterstad has led to the emergence of ghost towns; and
A community near Bhisho is still waiting after five years for electricity and water because the government refuses to provide the services until it has finished the housing project it started eight years ago.
The biggest victims in the province’s housing fiasco are among the most vulnerable in the population.
Like two pensioners, Loki Makeleni and Ngqukuse Nonxaza, who have been living in a flimsy cardboard home for seven months while their shoddy RDP house in Burgersdorp is repaired.
“The government doesn’t care about people who live here. We’re going to die in these houses. I’m just waiting for my coffin right now,” said the elderly Makeleni.
To rub salt into their wounds, the local Gariep Municipality wanted the same residents to clear the tons of rubble lining the streets – for free.
The problems in Burgersdorp are far from unique – in fact, all but one of eight housing projects visited by the Dispatch are being rebuilt .
In many cases inexperienced contractors have been blamed for the problems .
Two weeks ago Housing MEC Nombulelo Mabandla vowed to blacklist incompetent builders and recover funds from them where necessary.
But she said her department would never forsake emerging contractors and would do all they could to mentor them in future.
“ That is why we have developed a training programme for them, called the Emerging Contractors Development Programme,” she said.
Seymour and Venterstad are two examples where RDP homes have been deserted or remain unoccupied because there are no local jobs, or poor workmanship has made the buildings unsafe.
Yet the reverse has happened in Tarkastad, where more than 600 residents are on a waiting list to occupy low- cost homes in a nearby project that is standing empty.
Derek Luyt from the Public Service Accountability Monitor in Grahamstown said the department’s Service Delivery Charter and Service Delivery Plans for 2009 and 2010 highlight its pitfalls.
“Staff shortages and lack of sufficient skills have severely hampered the department in the past, and it will not be able to deliver sufficient houses of adequate quality unless it solves its human resources problems,” Luyt said.
Democratic Alliance spokesperson Pine Pienaar said the huge backlog, lack of monitoring and under-spending in the department was a direct result of the department’s inefficiency to fill critical posts in technical and finance departments. - By GCINA NTSALUBA. Pictures: THEO JEPTHA

Big business at human settlements

Big business at human settlements

What Housing Settlements Minister Tokyo Sexwale said in his departmental budget speech yesterday was not particularly revolutionary, but the way he said it was unfamiliar.
Sexwale used the language of corporate finance to describe the role of his department, saying that its ability to draw “the unbanked” and “uncreditworthy” into the formal economy by providing them with capital assets would play a key role in developing South Africa’s poorest citizens, as well as boosting the nation as a whole.
He also argued that housing and human settlements are, more directly, an extremely powerful “economic multiplier”, because of the stimulus given to a massive range of businesses when houses are built and when people set up new homes.
Sexwale said he would continue working closely with big business, particularly banks, who he said could be persuaded to go the extra mile beyond Corporate Social Investment because of the importance of these partnerships to the development of South Africa’s economy. He affirmed that “consultation will be the golden thread that runs through this administration”, that he had sat with big business and knows what they are doing, and that he would remain “a student”.
Sexwale sounded a cautious note about the future, saying that the global financial crisis means South Africa must be prepared to handle potential budget cuts, and that rapidly increasing urbanisation was a global reality that cannot be ignored.
He also spoke out against poorly-run or fly-by-night SMME contractors who, he said, have a tendency to “never stop emerging” because they don’t do proper business, confusing revenue with profit and capital with wealth. “Government needs value for money,” he stated.
Other speakers described the finalising of the Rural Housing Subsidy Vouchers, the Housing Development Agency and the continuation of the Breaking New Ground programme, while some called for national policies on hostel and backyard dwellers.
There was frequent mention of the need for better quality housing that was more energy efficient, and the Deputy Minister said more inspectors were being trained to ensure housing was up to standard.
While other speakers haggled over the progress made in the Breaking New Ground (BNG) programme’s flagship N2 Gateway project, Sexwale made it clear that he didn’t want to argue about things like the semantics of a new name, but would focus on getting to business.

Speaking the solution that moladi has proposed for the last 20 years

moladi - Housing the POOR

Winner of the NHBRC ABSA Housing Competition, moladi is established in South Africa, Angola, Namibia, Botswana, Mozambique, Zambia, Ghana, Nigeria, Panama and concluding Ethiopia, Tanzania, Kenya, Nepal, Egypt, Morocco and India – Housing the POOR - For more info visit www.moladi.net

moladi College - Training in Construction

The Herald Online

Urgent call for more artisans to be trained2009/07/10 Bob Kernohan BUSINESS EDITOR kernohanb@avusa.co.za
AN education and training expert called yesterday for the “skills revolution” to pick up and for artisans to be regarded not as “grease monkeys” but as being essential to economic growth.
Dr Raymond Patel, chief executive of the Manufacturing, Engineering and Related Services Training Authority (Merseta), also told business leaders in Mandela Bay of the dramatic drop, and likely shortfall, in the number of artisans in the country.
The number of artisans throughout the country totalled 28000 in 1986, but that figure had dropped to only 5000 in 2007, Patel said at a briefing organised by the PE Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Percci) and Bridgestone Firestone tyres.
The average age of artisans today was 54 – and Patel warned that unless dramatic steps were taken both to increase their numbers through accelerated training of thousands of replacements, and the recognition of their vital role, growth would be affected.
He blamed parents for not wanting their children to have jobs that involved getting “their hands dirty” by being “grease monkeys ...”
Patel – who has a PhD in education management – also urged that more emphasis be placed on students attending further education and training colleges (FETs). There they could study in “hard” skills, like engineering, science and technology, rather than taking “soft” courses like marketing and communications
“We are the only country in the world where we have more students at universities than we have at further education and training facilities.”
Yet, he said, 86% of students from the FET colleges gained employment within six months of leaving.
Artisans could be qualified within 18 months in terms of the accelerated programme. It required an entrance level of N3 or N4, depending on the field chosen, and comprised 24 weeks of classroom training and 56 weeks of experience in the workplace.
Such programmes also made huge sense for companies as billions of rands were available from the various Setas, which were funded by levies paid by companies anyway, said Patel.
Companies could get funding of a basic R30000, plus R6000 for each employee being trained in approved programmes. In addition, funds were now being made available to companies for re-skilling people as an alternative to retrenchment.
Such re-skilling programmes were essential as they provided not only fresh opportunities for workers, but also helped them gain self-respect.
“Often, losing a job leads to a downward socio-economic spiral that affects not only the worker, but the family and the surrounding community.”
Patel urged managers to be proactive and be at the forefront of taking on the “skills revolution” and widening its effects.

For training in moladi Construction Technology visit http://www.moladicollege.co.za/