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AFTER THE FIRE

Parliament looks to Mandela's funeral dome to host National Assembly during rebuild

South African MPs may soon gather in a familiar yet unexpected setting - a white dome that once graced the hills of Qunu during Nelson Mandela's funeral, now proposed to be used as a temporary Parliament venue due to the slow progress in reconstructing the fire-damaged parliamentary buildings, leaving the completion date hanging in the air like a poorly pitched tent.
Parliament looks to Mandela's funeral dome to host National Assembly during rebuild A spectator watches Nelson Mandela’s State Funeral from afar on 15 December 2013 in Qunu, Transkei. (Photo: Gallo Images / Foto24 / Werner Hills)

Within the next few months, South African MPs look likely to find themselves coming together for plenary sessions in an unlikely structure: a large white dome beamed around the world in 2013 from the hills of Qunu, where it played host to the funeral of Nelson Mandela.

The idea was first floated in July by Speaker Thoko Didiza – and at the first meeting of the parliamentary committee on public works on Wednesday, officials confirmed it was no longer just a pipe dream.

“We will be bringing it here for the use of Parliament,” Deputy Public Works Minister Sihle Zikalala told MPs.

Construction under way at Parliament on 31 July 2024 after it was gutted in early 2022. (Photo: Felix Dlangamandla)
Construction under way at Parliament on 31 July 2024 after it was gutted in early 2022. (Photo: Felix Dlangamandla)

Public Works Minister Dean Macpherson previously described to TimesLive something of a scramble to locate the dome, following the suggestion being made by Didiza. It emerged that the structure was being kept in Pretoria.

A presentation which was supposed to be given to the public works committee on Wednesday, but which was postponed due to the no-show of relevant players, gives several further details of how such a tent would work, although it does not specify that the Mandela funeral dome will be used.

It states that such a structure will be erected in the Nieuwemeester parking lot on Roeland Street, across from the parliamentary precinct. It will need to accommodate a 500-seater chamber, a 150-seater public gallery and two 110-seater committee rooms. It should further provide toilets, a coffee station and an air-conditioning system

A similar temporary marquee was used to house the National Assembly debates on President Cyril Ramaphosa’s opening of Parliament address in July.

Documents show that Parliament first issued a request for bids for the construction of “a modular structure in the Nieuwemeester parking facilities to accommodate the business of Parliament” in March 2022. 

The National Assembly  building at a media briefing on the progress of the reconstruction  project on 9 May 2024. (Photo: Gallo Images / Brenton Geach)
The National Assembly building at a media briefing on the progress of the reconstruction project on 9 May 2024. (Photo: Gallo Images / Brenton Geach)

The invitation stated: “Although this will be a temporary structure, it should be able to last for a period of at least 36 months and should be able to withstand the impact of all current environmental elements.”

Thirty-six months now looks a lot like wishful thinking.

Concern about state of parliamentary rebuilding project

Parliament had been due to receive a briefing on the progress of the parliamentary rebuilding project on Wednesday, but a no-show from Secretary of Parliament Xolile George and officials from the Development Bank of South Africa (DBSA), which is partnering with Parliament on the reconstruction efforts, meant that this did not happen.

DA MP Edwin Macrae Bath, a member of the public works committee, termed the failure of the DBSA officials to attend the meeting “outrageous and deeply disappointing”, given that they were expected to present “critical updates on the restoration of the fire-damaged Old and New Assembly buildings”.

Since Parliament was set on fire on 2 January 2022, allegedly by accused arsonist Zandile Mafe – who was since found not fit to stand trial – progress in reconstructing the affected buildings has been painfully slow.

Read more: Lengthy and complicated construction lies ahead in R3bn Parliament rebuild

A dedicated website set up by Parliament to enable the public to track the trajectory of repairs reminds us of the scale of the damage: “For almost three days, the fire tore through the five floors of the Assembly building and the adjacent Old Assembly Wing, collapsing the roof and destroying hundreds of offices which housed members of Parliament and staff and their contents.”

Walking around the parliamentary precinct today is a very different experience from a few years ago. Large portions are hidden behind scaffolding or boarded up.

Occasions which require large numbers of parliamentarians to come together, such as sittings of the National Assembly or the National Council of Provinces, have necessitated the use of venues around Cape Town ranging from City Hall to the Cape Town International Convention Centre to the Century City Convention Centre, often at a hefty price tag. A lack of available boardrooms means that even committee meetings now routinely have to be held in external spaces such as hotels.

Many MPs have expressed unhappiness about the pace of reconstruction. Demolition of the damaged structures was supposed to be well under way by now, with building slated to begin in August 2024 – but rubble is still being removed.

The presentation scheduled to be given to Parliament on Wednesday states that only 28% of the demolition of the old buildings was complete as of 16 August. The issue there is identified as one of “slow progress by contractor”.

Elsewhere, challenges in terms of compliance with heritage requirements and squabbles over land ownership have been cited as delaying factors.

As it stands, completion of the project is hovering around June 2026 – some four-and-a-half years after the fire.

Public works committee chair Carol Phiri urged a greater sense of urgency around the rebuild on Tuesday, saying that some MPs arriving at the precinct from 7am had nowhere to go in the absence of completed offices.

“By the end of the seventh Parliament we want to be in that house,” Phiri said. DM

Comments (9)

Just another Comment Aug 22, 2024, 06:06 AM

The DBSA is run by unprofeasional incompetents. What do you expect? A miracle?

Jax Snyman Aug 22, 2024, 06:57 AM

This idea reeks of a new feeding trough for the cadres. A city that according to Wesgro has over 10 convention venues that can accommodate in excess of 500 delegates and none of these would be willing to enter into long term leases at a competitive rate? The mind boggles.

tshiggo Aug 22, 2024, 07:28 AM

Absolutely agree. The 36 months will turn into 10 years and the contract extension will be at exorbitant prices due to the ANC incompetents scrambling around. At least a tent will blend in with the rest of the tents erected around the castle and along the pavements of the city

J vN Aug 22, 2024, 11:49 AM

They should actually erect more tents in Qunu and leave the dome in that beacon of prosperity and civilization, the Eastern Cape. Let the MPs sleep in the tents and cook dinner over campfires. Maybe being reminded of the poverty around them all day, every day, would focus their minds.

Malcolm McManus Aug 22, 2024, 01:30 PM

Quietly does it. Don't feed the enemy with innovative ideas. Before you know it we will see government tenders going out for tents, cooking pots and briquettes.

Rod MacLeod Aug 22, 2024, 07:33 AM

The demolition "expert" is Maziya General Services. Strangely enough, they are renowned for their history of project delays and cost overruns. They have also previously been fined for price-fixing collusion on a government tender. Yet here they are - friends of DBSA and already behind schedule. WTF.

Glyn Morgan Aug 22, 2024, 08:21 AM

The answer to the problem is to get the DA plus the Cape Town Municipality to do the job. Fixed in a flash!

Lawrence Jacobson Aug 22, 2024, 08:59 AM

Maybe we should ask the Chinese to build our Parliament?

janetteklein.za Aug 22, 2024, 12:07 PM

Thats exactly whatI was thinking !!! It would have been finished already.

Malcolm McManus Aug 22, 2024, 01:39 PM

Absolutely a winner, especially considering Chinese get higher BEE points than coloreds, Indians and whites. I believe they get classed as blacks. Wonderful idea. Almost everybody will be happy.

MaverickMe Aug 23, 2024, 12:04 PM

Only if they were born in SA before 1994.

Johan Buys Aug 22, 2024, 09:41 AM

What is the Good Hope Center used for nowadays? It is wired and plumbed and can accommodate thousands.

Steven Burnett Aug 23, 2024, 02:06 PM

it was on a long term lease as a film studio/set. Probably still the case.

Thinker and Doer Aug 22, 2024, 10:46 AM

How can a tent, no matter how spacious, be seen as a fairly long-term solution for holding Parliamentary sittings, especially with winter storms and summer heat? This is a nonviable plan, and there are also quite likely corrupt connections involved.

Malcolm McManus Aug 22, 2024, 01:40 PM

Most circuses are held in a tent. Quite appropriate.

dieterf45@gmail.com Aug 22, 2024, 08:24 PM

hahahahahaha-brilliant

Michele Rivarola Aug 22, 2024, 04:25 PM

R 2 billion to repair the old parliament is spitting in the face of SA's poor and unemployed. It is shameful

Miss Jellybean Aug 23, 2024, 11:55 AM

Could parliament not be moved to the Union Buildings in Pretoria in the meantime?

lesley.young1945 Aug 23, 2024, 01:00 PM

That’s too obvious. Loss of travel, holidays, excuses etc etc …….

Miss Jellybean Aug 23, 2024, 01:05 PM

Lol stupid me I had a moment of delusion when I forgot about the pigs at the feeding trough