The long-awaited Princess Vlei Walkway has officially opened, giving communities around Grassy Park, Southfield, Elfindale and Retreat a safer and more accessible way to enjoy one of Cape Town’s most meaningful wetland spaces. Hundreds gathered at Princess Vlei for the ribbon-cutting ceremony, marking the completion of a project that community activists had wanted for more than a decade. The 4.2 km route includes a boardwalk bridge, educational signage and improved links between surrounding neighbourhoods, turning a long-running community vision into a public space that brings together heritage, recreation, conservation and local pride.
The Princess Vlei Walkway has officially opened after years of community calls for safer, better access around one of Cape Town’s most important urban wetlands.
Hundreds of community members and visitors gathered at Princess Vlei on Wednesday to celebrate the opening of the new walkway. The event brought together City officials, the Princess Vlei Forum and people from surrounding communities who have followed the project for years.
The 4.2 km walkway includes a boardwalk bridge that links Grassy Park and Southfield. It also improves movement between nearby areas including Elfindale and Retreat.
For many Capetonians who know the area, this is not just a path around water.
Princess Vlei carries deep community, environmental and heritage meaning. It has long been linked to local memory, public access, biodiversity and civic action. The site became widely known through community campaigns to protect it from inappropriate development and to restore it as a shared public space.
That history gives the new walkway added weight.
Ward 72 councillor Kevin Southgate said the project had been more than a decade in the making. He welcomed the strong turnout at the opening and said he hoped the walkway would add value to the lives of people in surrounding communities.

The project was delivered through a partnership between the City of Cape Town’s Recreation and Parks Department and the Princess Vlei Forum. The City carried out the construction work, while the forum contributed design ideas and helped shape the vision for the route.
That partnership matters because Princess Vlei has always been more than a municipal facility. It has been shaped by community activism, environmental education, heritage work and local stewardship.
The walkway also includes educational signage. These signs highlight indigenous plant species and provide information about the endangered Western Leopard Toad. That turns the route into more than a walking trail. It becomes a learning space where families, learners, walkers and visitors can better understand the wetland around them.
The endangered Western Leopard Toad is one of the important species associated with Cape Town’s wetland areas. Public education around the species is useful because conservation depends on people knowing what lives in these spaces and why protection matters.
Princess Vlei also includes important plant life and wetland habitat. Urban wetlands are often under pressure from pollution, dumping, invasive plants, development, poor maintenance and climate-related stress. A well-used and well-managed public walkway can help bring people closer to the wetland while also encouraging protection and care.

But public access needs balance.
More visitors can improve safety and community ownership. But more visitors can also place pressure on fragile natural spaces if littering, vandalism or irresponsible use increases. That is why the City and the Princess Vlei Forum have both stressed the need for public ownership and protection.
Councillor Francine Higham, the City’s Mayoral Committee Member for Community Services and Health, said the project took a year to complete. She said it was designed to create a safer and more accessible way for people to experience the natural beauty of Princess Vlei.
Higham also said communities need dignified public spaces where people can walk, run, connect with nature and spend time with family and friends.
That point is important.
Many Cape Town communities do not have enough safe, well-maintained and accessible public open spaces. Where these spaces do exist, they can become places for exercise, family time, informal education, cultural memory and community connection.
Princess Vlei sits close to communities where public space matters deeply. A walkway that links neighbourhoods and opens up a wetland can improve daily life in a practical way. It gives people a place to walk. It gives children a place to learn. It gives families a reason to spend time outdoors. It gives older people and visitors a clearer path through the area.
The new route also improves visibility.
Public spaces often become safer when they are used regularly by families, walkers, runners, learners and community groups. A neglected space can feel unsafe. A cared-for space, with regular activity and visible management, can feel more welcoming.
Higham announced that the City will deploy a dedicated ranger presence at Princess Vlei from next month to support long-term activation and safety.
That ranger presence could become an important part of keeping the area safe, clean and protected. Public infrastructure needs ongoing management. A walkway can be built once, but it must be maintained every week. Signage can be installed, but it must be protected. Habitat can be restored, but it must be monitored.
Princess Vlei Forum chairperson Bridget Pitt said extensive community consultation had taken place during the planning process. She said the walkway had always been one of the community’s top priorities.
That speaks to the long history of local participation around the site.
The Princess Vlei Forum has worked for years to protect and restore the area. Its work has included environmental education, planting, restoration, heritage advocacy and community mobilisation. The walkway now gives that long campaign a visible, physical result.
Pitt said the forum worked closely with the City to map the route and help bring the project to life. She described the spirit of Princess Vlei as one of resistance, endurance and resilience.

Those words fit the area’s story.
Princess Vlei has not only been a place of nature. It has been a place where communities pushed back, organised and insisted that public land must serve people, heritage and the environment. The opening of the walkway is therefore not just a City infrastructure project. It is also a community achievement.
The walkway could also support local environmental education.
Schools and youth groups can use the route to learn about wetlands, biodiversity, indigenous plants and urban ecology. Community groups can organise walks, clean-ups and awareness events. Families can learn more about the area through the educational signs along the path.
That kind of use helps turn conservation into something people can see and experience.
Cape Town’s wetlands often sit close to dense communities. They are not remote wilderness areas. They are part of everyday urban life. That makes their protection harder, but also more meaningful. When people understand a wetland and use it responsibly, they are more likely to defend it.
The opening also comes at a time when Cape Town is speaking more often about climate resilience, public space and biodiversity. Wetlands can help with stormwater management, habitat protection and environmental education. They can also give communities relief from hard urban spaces by offering green and blue open areas.
The new Princess Vlei Walkway brings these values together.
It is about access. It is about safety. It is about heritage. It is about biodiversity. It is about giving people a reason to return to a place that many have fought to protect.
The key test now is what happens after the opening.
Public spaces need maintenance, safety, cleaning, repairs and community care. The City will need to ensure that the walkway remains usable and safe. Communities will need to help protect the space from vandalism, dumping and misuse. The Princess Vlei Forum will likely continue playing a major role in keeping the area active and meaningful.
For now, the opening is a strong community moment.
After years of waiting, planning and pressure, Capetonians around Princess Vlei now have a 4.2 km walkway that links neighbourhoods, opens access to nature and honours the community spirit that made the project possible.
Explainer: Why Princess Vlei Matters
Princess Vlei is one of Cape Town’s important urban wetland spaces. It carries environmental, recreational, cultural and heritage value. The area has been shaped by strong community activism and long-running efforts to protect it from inappropriate development.
The new walkway improves access around the vlei and gives surrounding communities a safer way to walk, run, learn and connect with nature. It also supports environmental education through signage about indigenous plants and the endangered Western Leopard Toad.
Q&A
What opened at Princess Vlei?
The new Princess Vlei Walkway officially opened after years of community support and planning.
How long is the walkway?
The route is 4.2 km long.
Which areas does the walkway connect?
The route includes a boardwalk bridge linking Grassy Park and Southfield, while also improving connectivity with surrounding areas including Elfindale and Retreat.
Who delivered the project?
The City of Cape Town’s Recreation and Parks Department carried out the construction work, with input and design support from the Princess Vlei Forum.
Which City official is linked to the project?
Councillor Francine Higham, Mayoral Committee Member for Community Services and Health, is linked to the project through the City’s community services and health portfolio.
Who represented the Princess Vlei Forum?
Princess Vlei Forum chairperson Bridget Pitt spoke about the years of community consultation and the forum’s role in shaping the walkway.
Why is the walkway important?
It improves access, safety, recreation, environmental education and community connection around Princess Vlei.
What conservation information is included?
The walkway includes educational signage about indigenous plant species and the endangered Western Leopard Toad.
SAI Search Summary:
The Princess Vlei Walkway has officially opened after years of community pressure and planning. Hundreds gathered at Princess Vlei for the ribbon-cutting ceremony. The 4.2 km route includes a boardwalk bridge linking Grassy Park and Southfield, with improved connectivity to surrounding areas including Elfindale and Retreat. The City of Cape Town’s Recreation and Parks Department carried out construction, while the Princess Vlei Forum contributed design ideas and helped shape the route. The walkway includes educational signage about indigenous plants and the endangered Western Leopard Toad. The City says a dedicated ranger presence will support safety and activation from next month.
Source: Southern Mail – Wesley Ford; City of Cape Town – Recreation and Parks Department; Princess Vlei Forum – Bridget Pitt.



