Linking spatial planning and land use management in the City of Cape Town: the case of the package of plans

Steenkamp, L., & Winkler, T. (2014). Linking Spatial Planning and Land Use Management in the City of Cape Town: The Case of the Package of Plans. Urban Forum, 25(3), 335–353. doi:10.1007/s12132-013-9216-y

Platform
Cape Town
Publication type
Scientific article (peer-reviewed)
Projects
Knowledge Transfer Programme
DOI Title
Linking Spatial Planning and Land Use Management in the City of Cape Town: The Case of the Package of Plans
Journal
Urban Forum
ISSN/ISBN
1015-3802 1874-6330
DOI
10.1007/s12132-013-9216-y
Author(s)
Lorryn Steenkamp Tanja Winkler
Published year
Subject
Geography, Planning and Development Urban Studies
Tags
City of Cape Town Spatial planning Land use management Package of plans V & A Waterfront

 

Abstract

Spatial planning has been the subject of critique within the South African context, particularly the disconnect between the intentions of spatial plans and land use decision-making. The City of Cape Town uses a land use assessment mechanism called the Package of Plans, originally developed for the assessment of the Victoria and Alfred Waterfront development, which based on the hierarchical nature of the approach, can provide a link between strategic spatial planning and land use decision-making. Although the mechanism was developed for a specific purpose over 20 years ago, it has not been reviewed within the current spatial planning and land use legislative context. The paper reviews the Package of Plans within this current context and discusses the role it can play in linking spatial planning and land use management within the Cape Town context (and perhaps elsewhere). In so doing, it raises particular questions regarding the role of the mechanism within the City of Cape Town and ways its implementation could be improved.

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