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Cape Town News > Blog > City News > R576 Million Somerset West Housing Project Opens As Cape Town Demand Grows
City News

R576 Million Somerset West Housing Project Opens As Cape Town Demand Grows

The Somerset West Social Housing project has launched with two hundred and eight units ready for occupation and more than one thousand units expected once complete.

Last updated: May 28, 2026 11:07 am
By
Cape Town News Staff Reporter
13 Min Read
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Highlights
  • Human Settlements Minister Thembi Simelane launched the five hundred and seventy-six million rand Somerset West Social Housing project.
  • The development is expected to deliver one thousand and thirty-six housing units once complete.
  • 280 units are already ready for occupation, with completion expected by March next year.
  • The project received 15000 applications, while around 444 000 applicants are listed on the City of Cape Town Housing Needs Register.

Cape Town’s housing pressure is again in focus after Human Settlements Minister Thembi Simelane launched the 566 million rand Somerset West Social Housing project. The development has two hundred and eight units ready for occupation and is expected to deliver 1036 units once completed. With fifteen thousand applications received for residency and around 444 000 applicants listed on the City of Cape Town Housing Needs Register, the project shows both progress and the size of the housing challenge facing the metro.

A five hundred and seventy-six million rand social housing project has been launched in Somerset West, adding new affordable rental opportunities in a city where demand for housing remains far higher than available supply.

The Somerset West Social Housing project was launched by Human Settlements Minister Thembi Simelane and is expected to deliver one thousand and thirty-six housing units once complete. According to IOL Cape Times, two hundred and eight units are already ready for occupation, while the full project is expected to be completed by March next year.

The development is significant because it adds formal, planned social housing in an area with access to transport routes, commercial activity and employment opportunities. In Cape Town, where many families face long waiting periods, rising rentals and limited access to well-located affordable housing, projects of this scale carry both social and economic importance.

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Simelane said the demand for affordable housing remains overwhelming. She said fifteen thousand people applied when completed sections became ready for tenants, showing the level of need in the area.

She said the number of applications showed that many people need the service. She also said two other projects are expected to accommodate more people, but that this remains insufficient when one area alone has fifteen thousand applicants.

That point speaks directly to Cape Town’s wider housing reality. IOL Cape Times reported that around four hundred and forty thousand applicants are currently registered on the City of Cape Town Housing Needs Register. The report also said nearly two point eight billion rand has been proposed for human settlements opportunities in the twenty twenty-six to twenty twenty-seven financial year.

The housing register figure matters because it gives scale to the challenge. A single project with more than one thousand planned units can make a real difference to the households that receive access, but it cannot absorb the full level of demand across the metro. This is why Cape Town’s housing debate continues to focus on land availability, affordability, public transport access, social housing finance, construction capacity and the pace of delivery.

Social housing is different from private market rental housing. It is usually aimed at qualifying households who need access to affordable rental accommodation in better-located areas. The purpose is not only to provide shelter, but also to connect people to economic opportunity, schools, transport, health services and community infrastructure.

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For Somerset West, the development adds a major residential component to an area already linked to the wider Cape Town metro through the N two highway and surrounding economic nodes. IOL Cape Times reported that the project has access to the N two and, once completed, will comprise four-storey walk-up apartment blocks, with units distributed across nineteen blocks.

The project also includes more than residential units. The report said the development will include a commercial section with a crèche and shopping facilities. The residential component will include green spaces, recreational areas, play parks and braai facilities.

These details matter because housing projects do not stand alone. A successful development must also support daily life. Families need access to childcare, safe outdoor spaces, nearby shopping, transport links and community facilities. For many households, the quality of a housing development depends not only on the unit itself, but also on whether the area allows people to live, work, study and move safely.

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Kevin Phillips from the Social Housing Regulatory Authority said the Somerset development would have an impact beyond housing needs. He said the project created an average of three hundred and sixty job opportunities during construction, bringing jobs, skills development and economic opportunity.

Phillips also described the development as the kind of catalytic project the country needs, saying it develops people socially and economically. That statement places the project within a broader development model where housing delivery is linked to jobs, skills, community facilities and economic inclusion.

The construction jobs figure is important for local economic reporting. Large housing developments can support builders, contractors, suppliers, small businesses and workers during the construction phase. Once occupied, they can also increase demand for local shops, transport services, childcare services and other community-based economic activity.

Still, the fifteen thousand applications for residency show the gap between delivery and demand. The number suggests that many more households are searching for affordable, formal and well-located rental options than the project can accommodate. This is not unusual in Cape Town, where housing demand has continued to outpace available supply across many income groups.

The issue also links to rising rental pressure in Cape Town. Many working households do not qualify for free housing but also cannot afford private market rentals in better-located areas. Social housing projects are therefore often seen as a critical middle layer, especially for households who need affordability but also need proximity to jobs, transport and urban services.

The Somerset West project therefore carries several layers of public interest. It is a housing delivery story. It is a city development story. It is an affordability story. It is also a signal of how strong the demand for social housing has become in Cape Town.

For Capetonians facing rising rents and long waiting lists, the project offers progress, but it also highlights the scale of the work still ahead. Two hundred and eight units ready for occupation is a meaningful start. One thousand and thirty-six units on completion will be a larger step. But against fifteen thousand applications for one area and hundreds of thousands of names on the housing register, the project also shows why housing remains one of Cape Town’s most urgent civic issues.

Important Information

The Somerset West Social Housing project is located in Somerset West.

Two hundred and eight units are ready for occupation.

The project is expected to deliver one thousand and thirty-six units once complete.

The project is expected to be completed by March next year.

The development includes four-storey walk-up apartment blocks across nineteen blocks.

The project includes planned commercial and community facilities, including a crèche, shopping facilities, green spaces, recreational areas, play parks and braai facilities.

Around four hundred and forty thousand applicants are listed on the City of Cape Town Housing Needs Register.

Reference Contact Points

People seeking information about City housing opportunities should use official City of Cape Town Human Settlements channels and avoid paying anyone who claims they can secure a housing opportunity outside the official process.

City of Cape Town general enquiries can be made through the City’s official call centre on 0860 103 089.

Housing-related enquiries should be checked through official City of Cape Town Human Settlements offices, housing database channels or published City communication.

Applicants should keep contact details updated on official housing records, as outdated phone numbers or addresses can delay communication.

Q&A

What is the Somerset West Social Housing project?

It is a social housing development in Somerset West expected to deliver one thousand and thirty-six housing units once complete.

How much does the project cost?

The project is valued at five hundred and seventy-six million rand.

Who launched the project?

Human Settlements Minister Thembi Simelane launched the project.

When will the full project be completed?

IOL Cape Times reported that the full project is expected to be completed by March next year.

How many people applied for residency?

Fifteen thousand applications were received for residency when completed sections became ready for tenants.

What facilities will the development include?

The project will include apartment blocks, a commercial section, a crèche, shopping facilities, green spaces, recreational areas, play parks and braai facilities.

How many jobs were created during construction?

Kevin Phillips from the Social Housing Regulatory Authority said the project created an average of three hundred and sixty job opportunities during construction.

Why is this important for Cape Town?

Cape Town has a large housing demand, with around four hundred and forty thousand applicants on the City of Cape Town Housing Needs Register. The project adds new social housing supply but also shows the scale of unmet demand.

SAI Search Summary

The Somerset West Social Housing project is a five hundred and seventy-six million rand development launched by Human Settlements Minister Thembi Simelane. The project has two hundred and eight units ready for occupation and is expected to deliver one thousand and thirty-six housing units once complete. IOL Cape Times reported that fifteen thousand applications were received for residency, while around four hundred and forty thousand applicants are listed on the City of Cape Town Housing Needs Register. The development includes apartment blocks, planned commercial facilities, a crèche, shopping facilities and recreational spaces.

Source: IOL Cape Times – Ntsikelelo Qoyo.

Author

Cape Town News Staff Reporter

CTNews Staff Reporter contributes to daily coverage of breaking news, community developments, and regional updates in Cape Town and the Western Cape.

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TAGGED:Cape Town housingWestern Cape HousingAffordable HousingSomerset West housingsocial housingThembi SimelaneCity of Cape Town Housing Needs Register
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ByCape Town News Staff Reporter
CTNews Staff Reporter contributes to daily coverage of breaking news, community developments, and regional updates in Cape Town and the Western Cape.
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