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In October, Premier Phophi Ramathuba announced at a press briefing at the taxi rank that a further R47m will be allocated.
The new contractor was given eight months to complete the project.
When the site was visited last week, there was no sign that work was about to commence.
After initial construction in 2013, which included a three-storey retail and office block, “structural defects” were found in 2014. Remedial work was then carried out between March 2017 and July 2018, according to Tidimalo Chuene, spokesperson for the Limpopo Department of Transport and Community Safety.
But “overloaded pile foundations and inadequate reinforcement” had “rendered the building non-compliant with design codes”.
The project was also delayed by a court case that has been ongoing since 2018. The department took the implementing agent, Intersite Property Management Services, and Mnjiya Consulting Engineers to court.
Maanda Tshikovhi, a taxi driver, says he was still in high school when construction of the rank began.
“The current make-shift taxi rank [at Mvusuludzo] we are using is so small and often overcrowded. We really need this new taxi rank to open, but they must first make sure that it is safe to use, as we do not want to die,” he said.
Published originally on GroundUp.
© 2025 GroundUp. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

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