Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Atlantis, South Africa

Atlantis
Atlantis is located in Western Cape
Atlantis
Atlantis
Atlantis is located in South Africa
Atlantis
Atlantis
Coordinates: 33°34′S 18°29′E / 33.567°S 18.483°E / -33.567; 18.483
CountrySouth Africa
ProvinceWestern Cape
MunicipalityCity of Cape Town
Area
 • Total
28.84 km2 (11.14 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[1]
 • Total
67,491
 • Density2,300/km2 (6,100/sq mi)
Racial makeup (2011)
 • Black African12.9%
 • Coloured85.0%
 • Indian/Asian0.4%
 • White0.1%
 • Other1.6%
First languages (2011)
 • Afrikaans79.5%
 • English9.4%
 • Xhosa7.7%
 • Other3.4%
Time zoneUTC+2 (SAST)
Postal code (street)
7349
Area code021

Atlantis is a town in the Western Cape province of South Africa. It is 40 km (25 mi) north of Cape Town.[2][3] As of 2024, it has approximately 90,207 residents. Major challenges in the area include unemployment, lack of housing, and crime.[4]

History

Establishment

The suburb of Atlantis was established by the South African apartheid government during the 1970s for the colored population of Cape Town under the Group Areas Act.

In order to attract industry and residents to Atlantis, the government introduced various incentives to attract manufacturing firms via relocation tax credits. In its heyday in the early to mid-1980s, there were approximately 50 industrialists in Atlantis employing people from nearly 8,000 households. These industries included large manufacturing companies such as Tedelex and Atlantis Diesel Engines.

Economic decline

From the mid-1980s onward, manufacturing activities in Atlantis declined with the termination of incentive programs and defense manufacturing contracts. The lack of incentives significantly reduced the attractiveness of the area. While Atlantis has since been through a series of mini economic booms and busts, the area's general economic trend has been of decline.

Currently, only about 3% of Atlantis' original companies still have business the area.

Revitalization efforts

Numerous new factories and businesses have started to operate in Atlantis. In the twenty-first century, over a billion rand has been invested into Atlantis by large multinationals. Currently, there are 94 factories and 77 services businesses in Atlantis.

Over 600 million rand has been invested by the green manufacturing industry to create wind towers, wind tower internals, and solar panels, among other goods. The investment is the result of cooperation between the City of Cape Town, the Western Cape Government, the South African Department of Trade and Industry, and GreenCape.[citation needed]

In 2013, the City of Cape Town, in cooperation with the Western Cape Provincial Government, declared Atlantis as a priority area for economic development, establishing a Greentech hub for manufacturing of components for the renewable energy and other green industries. An application has also been submitted for the Atlantis Industrial Area to be declared a Special Economic Zone (SEZ) with a focus on green technology. The SEZ status would provide investors a range of incentives such as co-location and access to established markets.

In the same year, Hisense opened a factory in the town in June[full citation needed], thus injecting 350 million rand into the first phase of the Atlantis plant, creating 300 production positions, and introducing a skills transfer program led by technicians and engineers from China.[5]

There have been a range of other interventions to revitalize the local economy:

  • Upgrading of infrastructure, such as the electricity supply, improved public transport system (MyCiti Bus System), installation of a fiber optic network to improve the broad band utilization, and load shedding curtailment agreements.
  • A special package of investment incentives for Atlantis like fast-tracking of building plan approval and land use applications, the waiver of building plan scrutiny fees, reduced electricity tariffs for large electricity users, partial waiver of development contributions, as well as the establishment of an Investment Facilitation Office. Through these initiatives, business is less costly and more efficient to conduct in the area.

The biggest new investment was the GRI South Africa factory, which manufactures wind turbine towers. The investment was approximately 400 million rand and subsequently created 230 new jobs.

See also

References