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  • SPICEBUSINESS | INVESTMENT | FOOD | TRAVEL | CULTURE | DESIGN | VISION

    August 2015

    ENCORE!How two fabulous fellows are helping

    the arts flourish in KZN

    Get inspiredMeet the pump jockey turned business mogul

    Going globalWhy world airline chiefs

    are flying to KZN

    +

  • 29 41 11.72S31 05 58.61E

    co-ordinatES

    SIBAYA

    SIBAYA

    UNIQUE LIFESTYLE... SERENE LOCATION... DISTINCT LUXURY...

    Sibaya iS an exquiSite

    reSidential development

    opportunity neStling in

    the affluent landScape

    of KwaZulu-natalS north

    coaSt between umhlanga

    and emdloti... the

    inveStment opportunity

    of a lifetime.

    UNIQUE LIFESTYLESibayas co-existence with the natural landscape and generous open spaces creates an exceptional live-work-play lifestyle fusion, ideal for the most astute purchaser pursuing a laid-back, tranquil, private and secure life with more than a tinge of green on the urban fringe, all based on the ethos of environmentally conscious development principles.

    SERENE LOCATIONSibaya lies at the heart of durbans northern urban development corridor, one of the most sought-after real estate investment destinations in South africa, and sets new standards for opulent, spacious and modern living.

    DISTINCT LUXURYSibaya captures the very essence of what luxury living is all about with an idyllic feel. this is one of the finest locations in the country, a luxurious place on the coast where residents are able to truly live the dream... a residential haven in which aspiration is justly rewarded.

    Sibaya, quite simply, provides the platform for the last word in elegant, stylish and sophisticated living. this is a development which promises superior levels of privacy and the peace-of-mind of unobtrusive security.

    DURBAN

    LA LUCIA

    UmhLANgA

    BALLITO

    EmDLOTI

    To take advantage of this unique property investment opportunity and for detailed site information, please contact:

    Sithembiso mthembu Cell: +27 (0) 60 560 2804Email: [email protected]: +27 (0) 31 560 1925

    Trenley TilbrookCell: +27 (0) 82 496 2169Email: [email protected]: +27 (0) 31 560 1928

    uninterrupted

    Sea viewS180

    SiBaYa

    August 2015 EDS LETTER

    Success is the progressive realisation of a worthy goal or ideal. Thats a line from the late US motivational speaker Earl Nightingale, and it played in my head the other day while attending an investment conference where some great KwaZulu-Natal businesses showcased their wares.

    They drove home the happy endeavour that is SPICE.

    In this magazine we get to display the work of a host of successful people in the province, across a variety of disciplines, from business to sport and the arts.

    Hopefully it is a tonic amid the doom and gloom.

    This is the sixth edition of SPICE and it has been enormously gratifying to meet so many of the individuals weve featured.

    Theyre representative of where KZN can pitch itself. They are talented, hardworking people who thrive in spite of the odds, and theirs is a combination of chutzpah and tenacity, or sometimes simply sticking to a worthy goal.

    I urge you to read the incredible article in this

    issue about Sbonelo Mbatha, the petrol attendant turned business mogul.

    And the piece about Gregory de Beyer, who won the first Shark Tank competition hosted by SPICE and FNB.

    The Sunday Times is immensely proud to be a part of the Shark Tank initiative. Weve partnered with awesome business people to make it a reality and to help encourage entrepreneurs, because without being too lofty in an era of grim politics, thats where our salvation lies.

    If you know an entrepreneur in KZN who is going places, please encourage them to enter Shark Tank 2 (details in the advert below).

    Next month Durban hosts the World Routes Development Forum, an influential gathering of global airline chiefs. Maybe it will result in more carriers landing in KZN. The event is an opportunity to exhibit the best we have to o er. Hopefully it supplements the hard work already being done to market the province.

    GREG [email protected]

    DO YOU HAVE A KILLER IDEA FOR A BUSINESS VENTURE, OR IS YOUR COMPANY ON THE BRINKOF GREAT THINGS?

    IF SO, LET US KNOW.

    The Sunday Times, in conjunction with FNB, is fostering entrepreneurship in KZN. If you are a winning entrepreneur well give you a leg up.

    ENTER OUR SUNDAY TIMES FNB SHARK TANK COMPETITION.You stand a chance to make a pitch in front of a panel of KZNs most influential and successful business people.Were calling it an engagement in the Sunday Times

    CALLING ALL KZN ENTREPRENEURS.

    YOU COULD

    WIN R150 000

    WORTH OF MEDIA EXPOSURE AND BANK ASSISTANCE, PLUS STAND THE

    CHANCE TO BE COACHED BY THE BEST BUSINESS MINDS IN KZN.

    To enter go to: www.sundaytimes.co.za/sharktank | Finalists will be notified by October 20th, 2015

    FNB Shark Tank and our fearsome sharks will interrogate your big idea (and your business plan) and use all their fearsome power to help put you on track to succeed.

    Its simple to participate: all you have to do is go online and fill in a form, present a business plan and be available on November 9, 2015 to make your pitch if you are selected. Entries close at the end of September, so dont miss out.

  • CONTENTS

    SPICE

    August 2015

    EDITORIALEDITOR Greg Ard [email protected], 082-822-0001CREATIVE DIRECTOR Megan GuytCHIEF SUB EDITOR Dave ChambersSUB EDITOR Nerissa CardDESIGNER Thembekile VokwanaCONTRIBUTORS Yasantha [email protected]

    Shelley [email protected]

    Beth [email protected]

    Masood [email protected]

    Nompumelelo [email protected]

    EDITOR-AT-LARGE Philani Mgwaba

    ADVERTISING BUSINESS MANAGERVerna [email protected], 082-452-6277

    PUBLISHER Andrew Gill

    Printed by Paarl Media

    Published by Times Media (Pty) Ltd, 4 Biermann Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg.

    Copyright: Times Media (Pty) Ltd. No portion of this magazine may be reproduced in any form without written consent of the publishers. The publishers are not responsible for unsolicited material. SPICE is published by Times Media (Pty) Ltd. The opinions expressed are not necessarily those of Times Media (Pty) Ltd. All advertisements, advertorials and promotions have been paid for and therefore do not carry any endorsement by the publishers.

    20

    24

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    2830

    cultureCOVER STORY

    Meet KickstArt Theatre Companys Steven Stead and Greg King

    Mountain biker Candice Neethling is pedalling towards a second OIympic Games

    Why Hartford House is a breed apart when it comes to luxury hotels

    The Discovery Sport is helping Land Rover conquer new frontiers

    The honour that fi nally left broadcaster Alan Khan speechless

    Ela Gandhi shares her hopes, dreams and wisdom

    24

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    19

    featuresBling it on: jewellery to make you a shiny, happy person

    Riverhorse Valley is a winner for tenants, owners and the government

    ICC: Durbans belle of the ball

    Nina Freysen-Pretorius walks the talk in the conference business

    Alan Gooderson on whats needed to make tourism boom

    MEC Mike Mabuyakhulu looks forward to next

    months World Routes Development Forum

    KZN by numbers: our provinces vital statistics

    Sbonelo Mbathas amazing rags-to-riches journey

    Gregory de Beyer is the ad industrys inspirational Mr Fix-It

    Why FNBs Preggie Pillay is bullish about the KZN economy

    04 | SPICE | August 2015

    12

    6

    dedicationcourage

    resilience

    visionambition

    creativity curiosity

    For more information on our business banking solutions, contact Andrew Hudson on 083 627 8767 or email [email protected].

    It takes certain qualities to be an entrepreneur. One of them is dedication: loyalty to your cause coupled with the will to fight for it, regardless of obstacles. Its what keeps you devoted to your business, one of the many that keeps the economy of KZN flourishing.

    As a proud sponsor of the Sunday Times FNB Shark Tank, FNB Business supports the committedentrepreneurs of KZN. Well continue to bring you the worlds most innovative banking solutions, and South Africas best mobile banking*, to help you grow and run your business, in the face of any adversity. Because your success is not just important for you, its also making a vital contribution to the economy of KZN, and to South Africa.

    First National Bank - a division of FirstRand Bank Limited. An Authorised Financial Services and Credit Provider (NCRCP20).

    *As voted by the SAcsi Survey 2015

    Get more bank. Do more business.

  • Colori range BY Mark gold Personality dress rings: r52 000 to r83 000Inspired by the 1960s and vintage glamour. The range features colourful pairings of gemstones set in gold and including quality, rare green tsavoriteContact Dean 031-303-4417 or [email protected]

    06 | SPICE | August 2015

    WaTCHeS UnliMiTedlongines equestrian

    Collection watch: r45 000

    Stainless steel case. Calfskin leather band. Mother-of-pearl

    dial. Set with 68 diamonds.Contact the La Lucia Mall

    branch on 031-572-4196

    ViJaY SHaH JeWellerS Custom, made-to-order: Price on requestAward-winning, individually designed and crafted pieces such as the three-in-one bracelet, anklet and neckpiece in yellow and white gold, and diamondsContact Vijay 031-564-2948 or [email protected]

    blIng IT onThere are many ways to make

    your eyes twinkle. Youll find some here.

    TEXT SIPHILISELWE MAKHANYA

    BroWnS THe diaMond SToreguardian angel necklace and earring

    set: Price on requestTanzanite and diamonds set in 18ct white gold

    Visit brownsjewellers.com

    Vernon WHiTePendant: r102 195;

    Tennis necklace: r125 470 18ct white gold pendant set with a pear-shaped

    citrine gemstone and diamonds on an 18ct white gold graduated tennis necklace with diamonds

    Contact Laura 031-303-8278 or Gateway Theatre of Shopping Umhlanga Rocks

    SPEnDIng IT

    daVid BaTCHelor Hand-crafted flower ring:

    r80 940 18ct yellow and white gold encrusted with

    88 sparkling cut diamondsBy appointment only. Contact Lauren

    031-205-8088 or [email protected]

  • The construction of Riverhorse Valley has had a transforming effect on provincial and municipal coffers, and created a workplace for 17 000 people

    The words public private partnership are trotted out a lot. PPP flips easily off the tongue, but there arent too many working examples worth crowing about. One that is flourishing is on a prime chunk of land reclaimed from swamp, latterly named Riverhorse Valley to recognise the areas historical hippo inhabitants.

    It is a collaboration between Tongaat Hulett and eThekwini Municipality, and appears to have cost slightly more than the presidential palace in Nkandla, but with a massive economic benefit to the city.

    Riverhorse has unlocked 323 hectares for modern, blue-chip business premises surrounded by open spaces and an indigenous river catchment area. In total, more than 180 companies, including global firms, have flocked there, especially logistics and warehousing concerns.

    The result has seen a private-sector investment of R3.2-billion and growth in the city rates base of about R83-million a year.

    Fifteen years ago there was a serendipitous coincidence of events. Nearby Springfield Park was saturated and then-Tongaat Hulett subsidiary Corobrik had to dismantle its old Effingham Brickworks plant and make its quarry safe.

    Nearby land was surrounded by sugarcane and dissected by the N2, recalls Tongaat Hulett Developments executive Brian Ive.

    That was around 1999, and after city approvals were put in place and hundreds of tons of bulk earthworks done, platforms of land started selling at R240/m, peaking at R3 000/m.

    Since 2002 the city has spent R300-million upgrading the Queen Nandi interchange and firms have ploughed R3.2-billion into buildings, creating 70 000 construction jobs.

    An independent survey commissioned by the city showed that taxes on new buildings have raised R500-million for government coffers. The study says the partnership (the city is a 60% shareholder) spent R215-million to establish Riverhorse Valley, in addition to the money spent on the Queen Nandi interchange, providing access to the N2.

    A critical feature of the PPP is the Riverhorse Valley Business Estate Management Association, which raises R600 000 a month from levies. The money funds top-up services such as landscaping, street cleaning and recycling, public open space maintenance, CCTV and 24-hour security operations.

    This spend translates into a saving for the city, as functions such as landscaping and street cleaning for the entire area are taken off its hands.

    Estate manager Bruce Macaulay says association members in Riverhorse are generally happy to pay the levies for the prestige and convenience of the address, safe in the knowledge

    that the money spent to create a viable node protects their property values and investments.

    They want good roads, adequate lighting, clean and tidy public spaces and decisive action to deal with errant behaviour from the public and members alike. All these elements have added enormous value to the properties here, says Macaulay. Firms based there, he adds, also thrive on easy access to the city and the freeway.

    Ive says joint management of the precinct has been made easier by the fact that Riverhorse Valley was well designed in the first place. Almost no expense was spared in the beginning, so the roads are wide, for example, and businesses prosper in an environment like that.

    The city study said a total of 17 000 people work in Riverhorse, 32% of them from the surrounding areas of Durban North, KwaMashu, Newlands and Reservoir Hills.

    Riverhorse Valley Business Estate, over a short period of time, has established itself as integral to the economic fabric of eThekwini the estate, although not able to facilitate as much new company formation as was hoped or anticipated during planning, has succeeded in providing a number of major companies with an alternative location to consolidate and expand their eThekwini operations.

    Paul Izzard, a director at Index Property Solutions, said Riverhorse was popular because it was well managed and easily accessible. It has a good aesthetic and modern appeal. Index has done three deals in Riverhorse recently, including a 1 500m call centre, a 2 000m office and warehouse complex, and a 2 500m new warehouse development.

    TEXT GREG ARD

    RIVER OF LIFE

    08 | SPICE | August 2015

    DEVELOPMENT ICC IN NUMBERS

    THE ICC OCCUPIES A CITY BLOCK THAT IS 1.2km LONG. THE BUILDING ITSELF IS 1km LONG, WITH 70 000m AND 1 400 PARKING BAYS

    1994 August 2015 | SPICE | 09

    TEXT GREG ARD

    A HAPPY MEETING PLACE

    Durbans International Convention Centre turned 18 this year.

    The elegant architectural masterpiece has come of age, transformed from a bratty teenager that drew on city resources into a beautiful belle which has consistently captured the eye of the world and now turns a profit.

    In 1992, two years before democracy dawned in South Africa, a progressive group of city councillors, business people and members of Operation Jumpstart hatched a plan to build the Inkosi Albert Luthuli International Convention Centre. It was a leap of faith that has paid o handsomely.

    HERE ARE SOME INCREDIBLE FACTS ABOUT THE DURBAN ICC

    CONSTRUCTION BEGAN IN 1994 AND IT WAS OPENED IN 1997 BY NELSON MANDELA

    The ICC is the largest column-free, at- oor conference venue in Africa

    THE DURBAN ICC WAS BUILT AT A COST OF AND HAS HAD SUBSEQUENT EXTENSIONS AND RENOVATIONS WORTH

    R286-MILLIONR460-MILLION

    It can host gatherings of up to

    20 000 PEOPLE

    IT HAS CREATED BED NIGHTS IN KZN FOR DELEGATES STAYING BEYOND THE DURATION OF THEIR CONFERENCES

    90% to 98.4%

    In the last year the ICC customer satisfaction rating improved from

    The ICC has played host to some of the most famous people in the world, including Yasser Arafat, Fidel Castro, Queen Elizabeth, Kofi Annan, Michael Bubl and Bryan Adams

    * In 18 years the ICC has hosted more than 7 800 conferences and brought 6.5 million delegates to Durban.

    * The ICC has created 57 000 mentions of Durban on Google.

    * The ICC employs 155 full-time sta and has a pool of 400 waitrons for big events.

    The ICC kitchen can serve 4 000 hot meals to any area of the venue WITHIN 11 MINUTES, using a system of tunnels and lifts to dispatch dishes (covered with heated blankets) to 16 SATELLITE KITCHENS.

    For the past FOUR YEARS the ICC has generated a cumulative profit of R116-MILLION; R24-MILLION in 2014 alone.

    In the past EIGHT YEARS the ICC has created 60 000 jobs and contributed R20-BILLION to SAS GDP.

    WITH ALL ITS INTERNAL DOORS OPEN, YOU COULD

    PARK 14 BOEING 747S SIDE BY SIDE IN THE ICC

    14BOEING 747s14

  • INTERVIEW

    T he International Congress and Convention Association is the leader in the meetings sector, with 1 000 member organisations in more than 90 countries, and its president is Durban tourism entrepreneur Nina Freysen-Pretorius.

    She is the associations first African president and is also CEO of The Conference Company, which arranges conferences through its o ces in Durban, Johannesburg and Cape Town.

    Freysen-Pretorius started her business in 1997, getting into conferencing because I like to organise and talk on the phone because Im a girl. She began her career working for an agency that focused on corporate clients, and when it dissolved she branched out on her own.

    Her business turned the corner when she bought a couple of contracts from other conference organisers. One of these was the International Confederation of Principles, with more than 2 000 delegates. It went well. We grew from there.

    Her company networks throughout South Africa, as well as into sub-Saharan Africa, often bidding at risk. This means we work for free, she says, and if the bid is won, we are then appointed. It can mean working for a year or two without being paid, until sponsorship is hopefully secured.

    Its a risky business model in a cutthroat industry, and there is no denying Freysen-Pretoriuss steely resolve. Its a challenge being a woman at the top in this industry. Often people dont realise that this work is about content as well as technical ability. And often they equate blonde

    WALKING THE TALKTEXT SHELLEY SEID PHOTOGRAPHY VAL ADAMSON

    Nina Freysen-Pretorius bestrides the conference world like a colossus

    with dof. You need to take the emotion out of it. I manage it; I remain professional. If you allow things to get to you, you wont be able to deliver.

    She was project manager for the COP17 climate change conference in 2011, and in the same year organised the International Confederation of Midwives. Her market is academic, research driven, scientific or medical.

    Its not glamorous and it is very content driven, she says. If your content is wishy-washy, not focused or not timeous you are dead in the water. Content counts.

    Her team often work years in advance. Currently they are bidding for 2020s International Zoology Conference. There are myriad components to a conference destination, venue, marketing, targeting and next month they are challenging themselves by running four international conferences concurrently.

    We often need to pull rabbits out of hats, says Freysen-Pretorius. We were appointed to organise a World Health Organisation conference and just before the event took place we were told that the Cuban Minister of Health would be attending. Of course, he couldnt stay in an American hotel we had to find a secure place and organise security at the last minute.

    Last year Freysen-Pretorius received the mayor of eThekwinis excellence award for the promotion of tourism. I like what I do. I love the planning, putting it together its like a jigsaw, and I love making all the bits fit. Its great to be able to show the world that Africa is capable of competently hosting international, high-powered conferences.

    NINA FREYSEN-PRETORIUS FAVOURITE SPOTS

    TO RELAXI love spending time with my husband and boys on the beachTO EATEora in Umhlanga for good old-fashioned, yummy food; Old Town in Umhlanga TO SHOPToni and Dee, Kirsten GossTO BE ROMANTICA glass of wine at home after a long dayFOR FAMILY OUTINGSSan Lameer on the South CoastTO SHOW VISITORSHluluwe and St Lucia for the wildlife

    10 | SPICE | August 2015 August 2015 | SPICE | 11

    Alan Gooderson is an old campaigner with a keen eye for a new idea. Hes also a straight-talking fellow who is the majority shareholder of Gooderson Leisure, a hospitality group based in Durban and listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange Altx.

    It runs 10 hotels and lodges, and four timeshare resorts, mostly in KwaZulu-Natal, employs 900 people and has property worth more than R220-million.

    Goodersons dad came to Durban from the UK in the 1950s to run dairies. He sent a telegram home saying, this is paradise, and his family soon joined him. By 1957 the Goodersons owned the old Lonsdale Hotel and Alan, the middle son of three, was a kitchen supervisor.

    He had grand ideas for entertainment as Durban had little to o er at the time. Other than listening to Harry Shakespeare, the Playhouse organist, there wasnt much to do.

    It was boring. I started the Cockney Pride Pub, then the Crazy Horse Cabaret Venue, as well as Ruby Tuesday and The Cats Whiskers, says Gooderson.

    I didnt invent the idea for any of them, I just saw what worked overseas and altered them for the South African environment, and they were very successful.

    Before long Durban also boasted other hot spots like Ra es and Fathers Moustache that were packed until the wee hours.

    Gooderson said he made a mint entertaining Vaalies and then-Rhodesians in race-segregated South Africa. His clientele wanted food and booze, and, cosseted by apartheid, could a ord three-week holidays.

    Much has changed and Gooderson has adapted to a new market, still from up country but now from a growing black middle class.

    Bars became conference centres and times became leaner because of strict drinking and driving regulations, but Gooderson tailored his product accordingly.

    We have the best weather God created. I would open more of the promenade to pedestrians, with open cafes.

    Id also encourage the people making decisions about tourism to line up with what business wants, instead of telling us we can and cant do this or that.

    Government should talk to us and we should all listen carefully to whats working. KZNs appeal is as a family destination for the domestic market. After that it is the international market, then the government and business markets.

    Goodersons 58 years in the industry have seen him sit on numerous boards and tourism bodies. He doesnt believe the tourism business should be too complicated. Its common sense. You give the customer what they want, which is good value and good fun.

    For Gooderson, who runs hotels from Durban to the Drakensberg, and game lodges and spas in northern KZN, it is about continually adding new attractions. Be it a water park, a bicycle track or a wellness centre, hes always trying to improve.

    I keep a notepad at the side of my bed and Im forever scribbling. When we travel overseas, which is quite a lot, Im making notes.

    Gooderson reads all the guest response forms from his hotels and resorts, amounting to about 600 a month. I inspect every property every six months and I read every single guest form. I like to know what my customers want and I never stop learning.

    He says Durban needs something iconic, one single thing that is an identifiable symbol, much like Rios Christ the Redeemer statue on Mount Corcovado or the Ei el Tower in Paris. He believes that will help market Durban and KZN phenomenally.

    Theyve been speaking about building a huge statue of King Shaka for a while now, which would be great, as long as it has viewing decks and tells KZNs history.

    Hes scathing of SA Tourism, saying the body barely markets KZN, concentrating instead on Cape Town and Kruger Park.

    They dont know where KZN is. What about our Zulu culture, Indian markets and beautiful beaches?

    If he could wave a magic wand hed ensure Durbans promenade had scores of pavement cafes where patrons could eat fairly priced seafood.

    Its crazy. Were a port city and seafood isnt abundant or even always available. When it is, its not at the right price.

    BE MY GUESTTEXT GREG ARD PHOTOGRAPHY ROGAN WARD

    Few people know more about local tourism than Alan Gooderson, and he has strong views about what needs to happen in the sector

    INTERVIEW

  • INTERVIEW

    SKYS THE LIMITEconomic Development and Tourism MEC Mike Mabuyakhulu tells

    NOMPUMELELO MAGWAZA about next months World Routes Conference

    Its a first for Africa and will see hundreds of aviation experts flock to Durban. Why did you do this? We are hosting this congress to maximise the benefits of route development. In KwaZulu-Natal our interest is to grow connectivity between King Shaka International Airport and international routes. It fits into our strategy of developing air connectivity and linking ourselves globally.Who should we expect for the conference?It will bring in representatives from 150 airlines and more than 600 airports globally, as well as aviation experts and policy makers. We expect about 4 000 delegates. What are your top investment priorities in the province?Dube TradePort has been positioned as an aerotropolis and has a project pipeline worth R10-billion of potential private sector investment.

    Richards Bay has a project pipeline of more than R100-billion, including investors interested in oil and gas, metal fabrication, energy and wood, pulp and paper.

    In the Ladysmith/Colenso/Ngakane area there is the revitalisation of the coal power stations. This is attracting the attention of industrialists interested in smelter parks.

    On the South Coast there is talk of a Music

    City in Hibberdene, a private sector investment driven by Americans. This will have elements of a resort with music facilities and spas. This project has tremendous support from local players and we are in the final stages of land consolidation. We will need a partnership with local people.

    We have four prospective investors for the Durban Automotive Supplier Park.Tourism plays a big role in economic development. What are your priorities here? Deepening our domestic footprint by introducing tourism information o ces around the country.

    Increasing international arrivals in KZN. At one point we had 14 international airlines flying to Durban. We are eyeing markets such as India, China, Russia, Turkey and South America. Our biggest market is Africa, so we need a strategy to extend this.

    The East 3 Route connects Durban, Swaziland and Mozambique, promoting trade and tourism. (This year Seychelles was added.) We are trying to sell this route to other parts of the world by pulling resources from all four countries so that we market the region and all the countries can share the spoils.

    We need to invest in and promote iconic tourism developments such as the Drakensberg cable car, a King Shaka statue and new resorts.

    PHOTOGRAPHY THULI DLAMINI

    Q&A with Zamo Gwala, the CEO of Trade and Investment KZN

    POTENTIAL FOR ECONOMIC GROWTH LIES EVERYWHERE

    How would you describe the KwaZulu-Natal economy and its opportunities?KZN is the second largest provincial economy, contributing 16% of gross domestic product in 2013. The services sector accounts for more than 60% of the provincial economy but there is a strong reindustrialisation move to create

    12 | SPICE | August 2015

    employment. The provincial government is establishing industrial economic hubs. The Richards Bay Industrial Development Zone and Dube TradePort continue to be growth engines.

    What sectors are doing well and why?Finance, property and business services, trade, manufacturing and logistics. These sectors are recording phenomenal growth rates of up to 3.2%. Great potential lies in agriculture and transport, including maritime transport. Potential for economic growth lies everywhere, with the provincial governments plans to attract strategic investment into Dube TradePort, establish industrial economic hubs and increase international tourism. One of the worlds largest independent liquid bulk suppliers of oil products, chemicals and gasses, is prepared to put down roots in Richards Bay, which will be a massive energy game-changer on our doorstep, considering South Africa imports about 70% of its oil.

    What is your message to investors?KZN has two of the largest seaports in Africa handling 80% of cargo destined for South Africa and neighbouring countries, as well as exports. These ports are complemented by King Shaka International Airport and Dube TradePort. KZN has become a vibrant province with a strong ICT sector which uses innovative approaches to ensure we leapfrog stages of development. It has an e cient banking system which matches the best in the world. This province also boasts vast, prime industrial land along the coast and inland.

    chemicals and plastics

    10.9 millionpopulation

    KZn economys contribution to the countrys Gross

    domestic product

    an

    nu

    al

    pro

    vin

    cia

    l G

    row

    th

    2.1%

    6.5 millionhectares is for farming purposes, with suitablefor livestockfarming and arable land

    82%81%24%

    national aGri output

    33%unemployment rate

    80%two ports,

    richards bay and durban, can handle

    about of the countrys cargo

    THE PorT of Durban HanDlEs abouT 2.6-million 20fT ConTainErs a YEar

    biGGest port in africa2.6 million

    richards bay is the main producer of aluminium, and produces about of the worlds aluminium exports 4%

    KZn is the countrys leading

    producer of timberautomotive and metal industries

    vehicle manufacturing employs about 7 000 people vehicle retail employs about 28 000 people vehicle component manufacturers in the province have a total annual turnover of

    r9.5-billion and employ around 13 500 people

    the province provides nearly a third of the countrys plastics

    kZn attracts 1.3 million foreign

    visitors and 13.9 million local

    visitors a year

    tourism

    August 2015 | spice | 13

    KZn bY numbErs

  • INTERVIEW

    14 | SPICE | August 2015

    TEXT NOMPUMELELO MAGWAZA PHOTOGRAPH THULI DLAMINI

    I ran the service station as if I owned it. I was even given a chance to train other site managers around Pietermaritzburg.

    His love for the petrol business landed Mbatha on a BP entrepreneur course. When I was told that I was not going to get my own service station, I was so disappointed and felt like my dream had been crushed.

    But BP called Mbatha when an opportunity came up to run a new service station in Dube Village in Inanda, Durban.

    I used this opportunity to negotiate with BP to sell me the service station for R2-million. My driving school was doing well and my experience running a petrol service station had improved.

    Since then Mbatha has bought three more service stations and his company, Divine Inspiration Holdings, has ventured into distribution for Unilever, from the south of Durban to Umtata in the Eastern Cape. We are about to start a new venture of our very own, Derma Scalp hair products.

    While Mbatha continues to search for more service station sites to grow his business, he uses some of his time to mentor young entrepreneurs. I do not want to be forgotten when I am dead,

    Less than 10 years ago, Sbonelo Mbatha was a petrol attendant. The 39-year-old now runs a group of companies with turnover ofR360-million a year and 300 sta . He has four fuel stations, a warehouse and distribution company, a driving school and a new hair product venture.

    It all began in 2006, when Mbatha borrowed R45 000 using a fair amount of cunning. I went to one bank and got a credit card, and before they could update their system I was already filling in a form at another bank. I raised R45 000 in an hour and drew all the money. All this was to help him buy a driving school in Durban. He was able to repay the banks within a year.

    Mbatha, who was born in eNqabeni on the KwaZulu-Natal South Coast, calls himself a circumstantial entrepreneur. I could not find a job after completing a cost management and accounting diploma. I was desperate and I became a petrol attendant, earning R800 a month.

    His first job was at a service station in Mount Moriah, north of Durban, where he was soon promoted to administrator. I was still earning R800, but I really enjoyed my work and learnt so much about how petrol stations operate. There and then I decided that I would not do any other job than this in my life.

    Soon after his revelation, Mbatha was o ered a site manager job at a service station in Pietermaritzburg, earning

    R3 000. This was the greatest news ever, a big promotion and a raise. I could not refuse it.

    so I am busy duplicating myself. I want to leave behind a legacy.

    His answer to unemployment is for the government and business people to invest in small businesses. I think Black Economic Empowerment is suicidal for upcoming entrepreneurs. It is the wrong formula and should be changed.

    If empowerment means throwing money at people who have no previous experience in handling it, then it is flawed, he says.

    Ithala CEO Yvonne Zwane described Mbatha as one of the development banks most inspiring clients. His hunger for growth and new opportunities continues to drive him. He is an inspiration to many young South Africans, having come from humble beginnings to become a successful businessman. He has never forgotten his roots and has helped many disadvantaged youngsters to further their studies.

    When he is not at church, Mbatha braais with family and friends. I am a church person, I spend

    most of my time with my family and church members, he says.

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  • Logashri Sewnarain, Regional Manager at SANRAL Eastern Region

    Derusha Govender, a project manager in training at SANRAL, foresees a bright future for herself with the agency.

    An enquiring mind coupled with a fascination for bridges and various other structures as a child naturally chartered Govenders career choice towards the dynamic field of civil engineering.

    Despite adversities she has had to overcome such as financial constraints, she chose to see every challenge as an opportunity for growth.

    Armed with a BSc Civil Engineering degree from the University of KwaZulu-Natal, she affirmed, Education is important because it assists in the path to personal development and helps individuals to bear the fruits of their labour, discipline and perseverance.

    Whilst in her matric year, the Durban-born engineer said she came across a SANRAL bursary offer which she applied for.

    She said obtaining a bursary from the agency significantly changed the outcome of her future.

    SANRAL provided me with an opportunity to improve my future through education. Not only has obtaining a degree in engineering helped me towards achieving goals in my career, it has also assisted in empowering and developing me as an individual.

    Presently commissioned to work on the N2 Mt Edgecombe Interchange project in Durban, she believes her strong academic background will enable her to adequately fulfil the practical tasks she has been assigned as a project engineer in training.

    With hard work and perseverance in mind, she hopes to be acknowledged by her seniors for her contribution to the civil engineering industry and looks forward to a flourishing career with SANRAL.

    Also singing SANRALs praises for awarding her a bursary is Fulufhelo Luruli, a project manager in training.

    She said while she yearned to join the engineering profession, she was confronted with a major financial hurdle which SANRAL helped her overcome.

    Thanks to a bursary from SANRAL, I could focus completely on my studies while my financial needs were taken care of.

    The rising engineer who hails from Ha-Magau in the Limpopo Province said people could benefit from better working opportunities by pursuing a career in engineering.

    After she obtained her BSc Civil Engineering degree in 2013, she took up a job offer in the Eastern Region with SANRAL.

    I am hoping to improve my capabilities as a project manager and I thrive on being a good team player as it will ensure work efficiency.

    Her career aspirations are to obtain professional engineering status and ultimately develop into a seasoned engineer, which would then increase her involvement in large-scale SANRAL projects.

    SANRAL offers the best working opportunities. I was seconded to a consulting company were I am getting valuable and high-quality design experience.

    I have also been exposed to courses that are related to my design experience, and the agency is helping me work towards acquiring my professional registration.

    She believes she will be contributing to infrastructure development in the country through her skills and knowledge.

    Last year SANRAL commemorated Womens Month by reinforcing the empowerment of women in infrastructure development at a roundtable.

    The event was addressed by Deputy Minister of Transport Sindisiwe Chikunga who emphasised that women must play a more important role in the economy of the country.

    Traditionally, women and engineering were not two words that went together, but that older world ethos has changed. From a base of about 20 students a decade ago, there are about 1 000 women engineering undergraduates currently studying at South African universities and technikons.

    Women contractors working on site

    Thousands of women are literally building the road to gender equality and female economic empowerment, thanks to progressive policies espoused by the South African National Roads Agency Soc Limited (SANRAL).

    SANRALs targeted procurement philosophy is aimed at broad-based BEE, thus contributing to and achieving economic growth by training historically disadvantaged individuals to become economically active; by reducing unemployment; and by stimulating growth in the small and informal sectors of the economy.

    In all these endeavours to create employment and alleviate poverty, special emphasis is being placed on ensuring women are given

    significant opportunities for economic empowerment.

    The economic empowerment of women is a prerequisite for sustainable development and the successful achievement of the goals outlined in the National Development Plan, said Logashri Sewnarain, Regional Manager at SANRAL Eastern Region which includes KwaZulu-Natal and Free State.

    As South Africa celebrates August as Womens Month under the theme Women United in Moving South Africa Forward, the call by the NDP for investments in gender equality becomes even more relevant as this enables women to have control over their lives and exert influence in society.

    Numerous studies have shown that when opportunities for women and girls have been expanded in terms of education and careers, the countries they live in have largely achieved greater prosperity and social development.

    In South Africa, women constitute a large proportion of the economically challenged, particularly in rural

    SANRAL HELPS WOMEN BUILD THE ROAD TO ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT

    Derusha Govender, a project manager in training at SANRAL

    Fulufhelo Luruli, a project manager in training at SANRAL

    Women working on the road

    4151

    SANRAL is committed to creating a path of growth and development for women in engineering and in business to ensure long-term sustainability of critical skills in our economy and our country.

    However, despite the progress made in closing the gender gap and making more opportunities available for women in business, South Africas construction industry is one place where being a woman is still a major challenge, said Chikunga.

    To help address the underrepresentation of women, government has invested R3.2 trillion towards infrastructure investment projects with R845 billion earmarked for the implementation of infrastructure programmes.

    She said she wanted to see 50% of women in managerial positions and more women engineers working with SANRAL.

    The economic empowerment of women is a prerequisite for sustainable development and the successful achievement of the goals outlined in the National Development Plan.

    The call by the NDP for investments in gender equality becomes even more relevant as this enables women to have control over their lives and exert influence in society.

    areas. SANRAL acknowledges this by harnessing a range of measures to advance womens equality, she said.

    SANRAL has committed to the economic empowerment of women by stipulating that contractors must ensure that 12% of the contract value is spent on work done by SMMEs, of which 10% should be spent on women-owned companies. Also 30% of spend on labour should be for women.

    SANRAL established a bursary scheme in 2007 to develop skilled individuals from previously disadvantaged backgrounds. During 2014/15, SANRAL awarded bursaries to 105 students at a total investment of R11.3 million.

    The programme sponsors students

    interested in civil engineering and the built environment. The bursary programme is a tangible contribution to closing South Africas skills gap, particularly in these disciplines.

    The programme also aims to supply SANRAL with future engineers and support the built environment through sponsoring and supporting black students, particularly women.

    During the last financial year, SANRAL spent R2.9 billion on contracts with SMMEs, of which more than R1.7 billion went to 765 black-owned firms. In addition, through SANRALs projects, 4 064 people were trained in elements of road-building, of which 1 694 were women.

    During 2014/15, several community development projects were undertaken, providing employment for 1 815 people. There were 175 women-owned contractors involved in these and other projects.

    In the same period, 4 064 people, of which 1 694 were women, were trained in road-building and other skills through 8 456 courses at a cost of R8.6 million.

    4151 Sunday Times Advertorial.indd 1 2015/08/19 12:03 PM

    Logashri Sewnarain, Regional Manager at SANRAL Eastern Region

    Derusha Govender, a project manager in training at SANRAL, foresees a bright future for herself with the agency.

    An enquiring mind coupled with a fascination for bridges and various other structures as a child naturally chartered Govenders career choice towards the dynamic field of civil engineering.

    Despite adversities she has had to overcome such as financial constraints, she chose to see every challenge as an opportunity for growth.

    Armed with a BSc Civil Engineering degree from the University of KwaZulu-Natal, she affirmed, Education is important because it assists in the path to personal development and helps individuals to bear the fruits of their labour, discipline and perseverance.

    Whilst in her matric year, the Durban-born engineer said she came across a SANRAL bursary offer which she applied for.

    She said obtaining a bursary from the agency significantly changed the outcome of her future.

    SANRAL provided me with an opportunity to improve my future through education. Not only has obtaining a degree in engineering helped me towards achieving goals in my career, it has also assisted in empowering and developing me as an individual.

    Presently commissioned to work on the N2 Mt Edgecombe Interchange project in Durban, she believes her strong academic background will enable her to adequately fulfil the practical tasks she has been assigned as a project engineer in training.

    With hard work and perseverance in mind, she hopes to be acknowledged by her seniors for her contribution to the civil engineering industry and looks forward to a flourishing career with SANRAL.

    Also singing SANRALs praises for awarding her a bursary is Fulufhelo Luruli, a project manager in training.

    She said while she yearned to join the engineering profession, she was confronted with a major financial hurdle which SANRAL helped her overcome.

    Thanks to a bursary from SANRAL, I could focus completely on my studies while my financial needs were taken care of.

    The rising engineer who hails from Ha-Magau in the Limpopo Province said people could benefit from better working opportunities by pursuing a career in engineering.

    After she obtained her BSc Civil Engineering degree in 2013, she took up a job offer in the Eastern Region with SANRAL.

    I am hoping to improve my capabilities as a project manager and I thrive on being a good team player as it will ensure work efficiency.

    Her career aspirations are to obtain professional engineering status and ultimately develop into a seasoned engineer, which would then increase her involvement in large-scale SANRAL projects.

    SANRAL offers the best working opportunities. I was seconded to a consulting company were I am getting valuable and high-quality design experience.

    I have also been exposed to courses that are related to my design experience, and the agency is helping me work towards acquiring my professional registration.

    She believes she will be contributing to infrastructure development in the country through her skills and knowledge.

    Last year SANRAL commemorated Womens Month by reinforcing the empowerment of women in infrastructure development at a roundtable.

    The event was addressed by Deputy Minister of Transport Sindisiwe Chikunga who emphasised that women must play a more important role in the economy of the country.

    Traditionally, women and engineering were not two words that went together, but that older world ethos has changed. From a base of about 20 students a decade ago, there are about 1 000 women engineering undergraduates currently studying at South African universities and technikons.

    Women contractors working on site

    Thousands of women are literally building the road to gender equality and female economic empowerment, thanks to progressive policies espoused by the South African National Roads Agency Soc Limited (SANRAL).

    SANRALs targeted procurement philosophy is aimed at broad-based BEE, thus contributing to and achieving economic growth by training historically disadvantaged individuals to become economically active; by reducing unemployment; and by stimulating growth in the small and informal sectors of the economy.

    In all these endeavours to create employment and alleviate poverty, special emphasis is being placed on ensuring women are given

    significant opportunities for economic empowerment.

    The economic empowerment of women is a prerequisite for sustainable development and the successful achievement of the goals outlined in the National Development Plan, said Logashri Sewnarain, Regional Manager at SANRAL Eastern Region which includes KwaZulu-Natal and Free State.

    As South Africa celebrates August as Womens Month under the theme Women United in Moving South Africa Forward, the call by the NDP for investments in gender equality becomes even more relevant as this enables women to have control over their lives and exert influence in society.

    Numerous studies have shown that when opportunities for women and girls have been expanded in terms of education and careers, the countries they live in have largely achieved greater prosperity and social development.

    In South Africa, women constitute a large proportion of the economically challenged, particularly in rural

    SANRAL HELPS WOMEN BUILD THE ROAD TO ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT

    Derusha Govender, a project manager in training at SANRAL

    Fulufhelo Luruli, a project manager in training at SANRAL

    Women working on the road

    4151

    SANRAL is committed to creating a path of growth and development for women in engineering and in business to ensure long-term sustainability of critical skills in our economy and our country.

    However, despite the progress made in closing the gender gap and making more opportunities available for women in business, South Africas construction industry is one place where being a woman is still a major challenge, said Chikunga.

    To help address the underrepresentation of women, government has invested R3.2 trillion towards infrastructure investment projects with R845 billion earmarked for the implementation of infrastructure programmes.

    She said she wanted to see 50% of women in managerial positions and more women engineers working with SANRAL.

    The economic empowerment of women is a prerequisite for sustainable development and the successful achievement of the goals outlined in the National Development Plan.

    The call by the NDP for investments in gender equality becomes even more relevant as this enables women to have control over their lives and exert influence in society.

    areas. SANRAL acknowledges this by harnessing a range of measures to advance womens equality, she said.

    SANRAL has committed to the economic empowerment of women by stipulating that contractors must ensure that 12% of the contract value is spent on work done by SMMEs, of which 10% should be spent on women-owned companies. Also 30% of spend on labour should be for women.

    SANRAL established a bursary scheme in 2007 to develop skilled individuals from previously disadvantaged backgrounds. During 2014/15, SANRAL awarded bursaries to 105 students at a total investment of R11.3 million.

    The programme sponsors students

    interested in civil engineering and the built environment. The bursary programme is a tangible contribution to closing South Africas skills gap, particularly in these disciplines.

    The programme also aims to supply SANRAL with future engineers and support the built environment through sponsoring and supporting black students, particularly women.

    During the last financial year, SANRAL spent R2.9 billion on contracts with SMMEs, of which more than R1.7 billion went to 765 black-owned firms. In addition, through SANRALs projects, 4 064 people were trained in elements of road-building, of which 1 694 were women.

    During 2014/15, several community development projects were undertaken, providing employment for 1 815 people. There were 175 women-owned contractors involved in these and other projects.

    In the same period, 4 064 people, of which 1 694 were women, were trained in road-building and other skills through 8 456 courses at a cost of R8.6 million.

    4151 Sunday Times Advertorial.indd 1 2015/08/19 12:03 PM

  • 18 | SPICE | August 2015

    Out of adversity, Gregory de Beyer created a business that solves the ad industrys problems using a potent combination

    of ingenuity, innovation and grit, writes Greg Ard

    If ever there was an inspiring tale for entrepreneurs, it has to be Gregory de Beyers. His life story, in parts, sounds like a bad country and western song, but it is distinguished by incredible triumph over adversity.

    Earlier this year, the tenacious businessman wowed judges at a Dragons Den-type event hosted by SPICE magazine and FNB. Dubbed The Shark Tank, the event brought 10 finalists before a panel of top KwaZulu-Natal business people.

    Entrepreneur extraordinaire Stephen Saad opened the event, stressing the importance of resolve. You are not defined by your success or your failures. You are going to have big knocks. That is not important. It is how you get up that counts. It is the sacrifices you make and the many times you fall that count entrepreneurs never give up.

    All the ideas presented in The Shark Tank

    were remarkable, but standing head and shoulders above the rest was a mobile beer keg designed and manufactured by De Beyer, 57, who owns Adstuff in Chris Hani (formerly North Coast) Road.

    De Beyers story is arresting. When he was 40, he had a calamitous year. He was retrenched and divorced, and in a bid to pay the bills he was repairing a yacht when his oxy-acetylene torch failed, creating a fireball. He suffered third-degree burns to his hands and second-degree burns to his face and body.

    For eight months, he was unable to use his hands for anything but piloting a computer mouse, but he had two sons in high school and bills to pay, so he had no option but to earn. He taught himself graphic design and Adstuff was born.

    He started tinkering, then working out of the garage of his Berea home. His main line of business was designing and making business cards and letterheads. His guardian angel was his mother,

    Pearl, now 84, who did everything she could for her son, down to running the printing machine, fetching supplies and making all the deliveries.

    She ran his household and made sure her grandsons, Matthew and Mavric, were looked after.

    Mrs de Beyer is still involved in the business. She is the cheery face greeting clients at reception. When shes not doing that, she looks after other administrative tasks.

    My mom is a legend. If it werent for her I would have been broken. I couldnt do anything after the accident, but she was there 24/7, making sure my life worked, says De Beyer.

    Adstuff grew from strength to strength on the back of De Beyers willingness to find solutions. An avid yachtsman, he prides himself on being able to fix just about anything, anywhere, using scant resources.

    He developed a reputation for being a MacGyver in the advertising industry and designs

    PHOTOGRAPHY VAL ADAMSON

    MR FIX-IT

    ENTREPRENEUR

    August 2015 | SPICE | 19

    TEXT preggie pillay, fnb business kwazulu-

    natal provincial head

    Diverse KZN economy offers vast opportunities for entrepreneurship

    and manufactures the most challenging point-of-sale displays.

    Always scheming, the team at Adstuff work constantly on a variety of projects. Last year they produced a herd of life-size fibreglass rhino for a campaign. This year they are working on hand-sanitising machines De Beyer is producing for hospitals, catering companies and schools. Put your hands in the machine and it washes and sanitises them in 10 seconds, using 10% of the water and 30% of the soap used in a conventional wash basin.

    De Beyers winning Shark Tank presentation was for a portable draught machine. The drive is on to pour cold beer in Africa, but the main challenge is reliable power. Traditional draught machines require electricity to power their flash coolers and precool kegs of beer.

    Months of tinkering in his factory saw De Beyer come up with a mobile unit that dispenses beer at

    IF SOMEONE ELSE CAN DO SOMETHING,

    THEN SO CAN I

    KwaZulu-Natal is a key province for entrepreneurs who have the skills to maximise the benefits of a diverse economy. Growing above the national economic average, KZN has diversified by creating a number of viable industries.

    An initiative to boost manufacturing is the creation of special economic zones such as the Dube TradePort and, in Richards Bay, industrial clusters driven by investment incentives. The focus is value-added and export-orientated manufacturing.

    It is important for the public and private sectors to collaborate to enable entrepreneurs to benefit from this diverse regional economy.

    The provincial government has demonstrated its commitment to investing in programmes that have the potential to sustain the growth and to create new entrepreneurial opportunities. The province has budgeted R12.060-billion in 2015/16, R11.804-billion in 2016/17 and R12.196-billion in 2017/18 to invest in infrastructure projects.*

    The sustained investment inflow is likely to create more opportunities for big and small businesses. More importantly, it will create an environment where small and medium enterprises can participate in the broader supply chain and create jobs.

    Equally, the private sector continues to play an essential role. From an FNB perspective, we recently demonstrated our commitment to the province by opening our Acacia House provincial head office, built with an investment of nearly R500-million.

    The office consolidates a number of companies within the FirstRand Group, enabling us to offer a suite of services to emerging entrepreneurs, big business and individual consumers. We continue to enhance our offering for entrepreneurs, but, more importantly, we want to be accessible to better understand their needs.

    * MEC Belinda Scott: KwaZulu-Natal 2015/16 Budget Vote point 48.Chartered accountant Preggie Pillay is the provincial chairman, head of FNB Business in KZN. He is responsible for all business-to-business interaction in the region.

    2C using two bags of ice and a CO cylinder. It is portable and fits in the boot of a small car. There is space for advertising on the unit that houses the mechanics and 50-litre keg.

    De Beyer says problem-solving and passion are at the heart of his entrepreneurship.

    When I started my business the only work available was that which other companies did not want. Invariably it was impossible or just difficult, and because I was desperate I would half listen to the problem at hand, say yes I could do it, then spend sleepless nights wondering why on earth I took on the challenge.

    My company slogan comes out of that: The answer is yes, now what is the question.

    De Beyer describes the creative and problem-solving side of his business as unbelievably rewarding once the issues have been resolved.

    The road to completion can be a bit traumatic, but my fiance, Linda, is teaching me to balance work and leisure time, which makes the journey a lot more pleasant.

    I have always believed that we are all born with equal abilities, so if someone else can do something, then so can I. Its from this train of thought that our success is derived. De Beyers take on the shark tankIt was a very interesting competition in that it showed me how to present my ideas.

    To a large degree I think that one over-complicates or over-explains an idea and loses the connection with the client. In The Shark

    Tank we had seven minutes to present whatever idea we had, and if you think that is a long time, you will be surprised at how quickly it goes.

    From a business perspective it cemented my belief that if you

    have not hooked the client in the first minute of your pitch, its all up-hill from there.

    Watching the other contestants present also crystallised the need for self belief. There were marked differences between contestants who knew they had a good concept and those who thought they might have one.

    Simple is also paramount I believe Albert Einstein said: If you cant explain it simply, you dont understand it well enough.

    For anybody entering this competition in the future, keep it super-simple and keep it real. The people on the panel are smart and successful, and if you take a chance, they will know immediately.Do not over-project your expectations and do not over-explain your idea. Keep it concise.

    To enter the next Shark Tank competition visit www.sundaytimes.co.za/sharktank

  • THEATRE + RETREAT + MOTORING + VISION

    20 | SPICE | August 2015

    cultureThe future of theatre in Durban is in the energetic, creative and

    prolific hands of Steven Stead and Greg King

    TEXT GREG ARD

    PHOTOGRAPHY VAL ADAMSON

    dOublE AcT

    August 2015 | SPICE | 21

    cultureGreg King and Steven Stead are clever, refined and charming. Intelligent gentlemen of the arts, theyre witty and well read. And as the directors of the most successful production company in Durban, theyre at the epicentre of theatre in the province.

    They are the darlings of critics and local audiences, and their shows be they dramas, comedies, pantomimes or musicals are invariably sold out. Audiences revel in KickstArt Theatre Companys offerings, from Beauty and the Beast to Margaret Edsons brilliant Wit and Stephen Sondheims brooding Sweeney Todd.

    For an extraordinarily talented pair, King and Stead are unpretentious and self-effacing. Stead, who spent eight years as senior staff director at the English National Opera in London, says while the world of showbusiness is generally associated with egos, temperamental artists and tantrums, theres little space for being precious.

    We create a safe space for artists to be creative, but theres no room for prima donnas. As a director, I am workmanlike and practical, not histrionic or fey. More like a plumber or an electrician, I know how to do the job and get water to come out of the tap or make the lights switch on.

    King, the quieter of the two, describes the duo as one guy with a computer and another guy with a bakkie.

    Stead and King have been together almost since KickstArt was born 15 years ago, and were married this year. In that time they have produced

    more than 50 shows and have been a veritable incubator of theatrical talent in Durban, providing income and a platform for hundreds of performers, crew, technical and backstage staff.

    Most often King, 44, is the designer and Stead, 45, the director. Both have honours degrees in drama from Natal University (now the University of KwaZulu-Natal).

    Kings ambition at varsity was to work for the erstwhile Napac (Natal Performing Arts Council). After graduating he joined Napacs puppet company, but the council folded, and in 2000 he launched KickstArt.

    In an era of one-man bands, when lonely actors traversed the country doing rough theatre with collapsible sets in their car boots, his first production was Ben Eltons Popcorn, with a cast of nine and a complex set.

    Stead returned from London to join him. I realised we could do it again. It was born out of nostalgia for what made us fall in love with the theatre: fully-fledged productions of internationally recognised scripts, with proper sets and costumes, says King.

    Stead adds: There were enough good, hungry actors in Durban. Audiences gradually became engaged and it flourished.

    A decade-and-a-half later they have a mantelpiece full of trophies and a sackful of fabulous memories. KickstArt has also allowed them to make a living in Durban, and to present their work nationally in co-productions with renowned

    figures such as Pieter Toerien and Daphne Kuhn.

    KickstArt is among a handful of independent theatre companies that flourish in South Africa. Its productions are celebrated for attention to detail and it offers a canny mix of commercial hits and thought-provoking arthouse.

    King and Stead are most fondly known for their stirring musicals and annual pantomimes. They buy the rights abroad and are left to interpret the look and feel locally.

    We largely follow a western aesthetic and we have been criticised for it, says King.

    But thats what we are and what makes us tick. Were not going to be inauthentic to please detractors, says Stead.

    Asking us to do workshop or socio-political work in an African style is like asking Picasso to paint realism. Thats not what he did. We create work based on what excites us and what our audiences want. Its a gamble: we can do our market research on a show and still have empty seats. You dont always hit the button.

    King says they have stayed afloat financially by running a lean outfit. We cant take big financial risks. But we arent answerable to anyone and Im proud our shows look glossy because theyre really

    Greg King and Steven Stead have incubated local theatre talent through a host of amazing productions

  • 22 | SPICE | August 2015

    9 Facts about steven & GreG

    1. Gregs mother was a consumer adviser for a supermarket chain, his dad a furniture salesman. He has four siblings and went to Maritzburg College.

    2. Stevens dad was a lieutenant-colonel in the air force and his mom a biology teacher. They had three children.

    3. The family lived on the Bluff, where Steven and Greg live now.

    4. Steven went to Glenwood High School, where he says he often felt crushed by jocks who lampooned his interest in the arts. Their ridicule drove him to succeed.

    5. Both men had an early fascination with puppetry. In Standard 5, the creators of War Horse, Handspring Puppet Company, visited Gregs school. They took my breath away. I went home and started making puppets.

    6. When Steven was a child he roped his brothers into his shows, paying them 5c to operate the lights or arrange the props.

    7. Greg says creating huge, intricate puppets like the dragon in Shrek is part fascination with the wizardry of mechanics and part love of art and animation.

    8. Steven says it can all go wrong, but the show must go on. One year we did a Snow White pantomime. Greg was doing another gig so I was spinning. The theatre was burgled the night before opening. We had no help and I had just cleaned the toilets. I tidied up to run front-of-house. The show was about to start and I discovered we only had five dwarves, not seven. I was a wreck, sobbing alone in the ticket office: a dark night of the soul.

    9. Greg says the theatre world can be precious. The richness is in adaptation, theres seldom anything new. Our creative outpouring is a culmination of all the things we love.

    tied together with string. There are affordable ways to make it special. Thats the magic.

    Their musicals cost about R1-million to produce, about 10% of the cost of imported shows such as Phantom of the Opera.

    King and Stead are fulfilled working in Durban, but didnt imagine it would pan out this way. King recalls an epiphany on set one day. Id always been thinking, When am I going to get my big break, whens my career going to start? Then it dawned on me that this was my break, I was on the journey and enjoying it. Were our most successful when we are our most passionate. If it is turning you on and satisfying you, do it: put on a show, love the journey.

    Stead says: I have a fantastic life and Im privileged to share it with someone who has the same passion.

    His parents took him to all the shows in Durban as a child, instilling in him the love for what he and King do today. I thought they were magical. It clicked that switch in me.

    If I had any advice for someone who was in my shoes 25 years ago, Id say you dont have to aim for Broadway, therein lies heartache. I know, Ive been there. At the end of the day Id rather be a producer in Durban than a waiter in Los Angeles.

    Having said that, they acknowledge that the arts scene in South Africa is on shaky ground, and urge the government and business to be smarter about funding.

    King is considered. Theatre played an important role in the change to democracy, but that has stigmatised theatre in the public eye as hard work and didactic, and often an effort to attend. And when the establishment doesnt seem to support theatre, other than politically motivated work, it makes for a lack of variety and colour in the creative landscape.

    Stead is scathing. There is no one in government who knows anything about arts or cares. The arts minister position is generally given as a punishment of some sort to the most inept. Pouring vast sums of money into institutions like The Playhouse doesnt foster creativity: state funding on this scale makes artists lazy and

    complacent, and there is no real incentive to strive for genuine excellence. It doesnt matter whether the public comes or not. The money will still roll in provided the forms are all filled in correctly. State-funded theatres generally put on enormous, poorly produced shows that nobody goes to. The arts needs funding, desperately, but at grassroots level. Currently, most of the money is flowing into places that are empty clanging bells, mausoleums to art.

    KickstArt partially survived through an annual R250 000 grant from the National Arts Council. We got it for six years and it helped pay our tax bill, and encouraged us to take the odd risk. We were grateful for it, Stead says.

    Now, says King, were liberated by being independent. We walk a tightrope by doing crowd-pleasing, commercial shows and satisfying ourselves artistically, but being lean has helped us. We can do this because we spend modestly.

    Stead chips in: Were mavericks. We have to make a plan. If someone gave us R50-million, I dont know that it would be good for us.

    KickstArt has done its share of comedy and

    serious theatre

    THEATRE DURSouth Africas largest unserved international market

    www.dubetradeport.co.za

    Durban is a tourists haven with diverse cultural heritage. It is also a trade gateway to Sub-Saharan Africa, and boasts South Africas second-largest economy. Offering an attractive airline-incentive programme, and the state-of-the-art King Shaka International Airport (awarded the 2013 Skytrax Best Airport in World Handling under 5 Million Passengers), Durban has taken off.

    JOIN US IN DURBAN FORWORLD ROUTES 2015

    * Source Sabre ADI, July 2015

    OF THE BUSIESTSTRATEGICALLY LOCATED BETWEEN

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  • INTERVIEW

    24 | SPICE | August 2015

    Mountain biker Candice Neethling already has one

    Olympics under her belt, and shes determined to fl y the South

    African fl ag in Rio next year

    TEXT SHELLEY SEID

    PHOTOGRAPHY EMMA HILL

    PEDAL POWER

    For Olympian Candice Neethling, 23, mountain biking is part of her DNA. Born and raised on the KwaZulu-Natal South Coast, she was the only woman to represent South Africa in the cross-country event at the 2012 Olympic Games in London.

    As a three-year-old she announced that she would be riding 22km from the family sugarcane farm to the local hotel and back. No one tried to stop her. My dad made a plan by putting an upright broomstick at the back of my little yellow bicycle in case he needed to push me along, she says. After that very first ride I knew I felt a connection with a bicycle and turning the pedals fast.

    She grew up on a farm in Oribi Gorge with parents who enjoyed outdoor activities, and cycling in particular. It was an area that gave her space to roam freely and explore the mountains, often with her father, who taught her the fundamentals. But she says there was no pressure to ride professionally. The choice was always mine. He just wanted me to experience the joy of riding with him. I have a younger sister who will not go near a bicycle, but she is my biggest supporter.

    She began racing competitively at the age of 11, when she took part in a 30km event with her father. Things grew from there. The feeling of pure abandonment and freedom I get from riding a bicycle has remained the same throughout, she says.

    In 2009 Candice won bronze at the Junior World Championships in Canberra, Australia, and has competed in every world championship since. Her win at the 2012 African Continental Championship in Mauritius qualified her for the sole womans spot on the Olympic mountain biking team later that year.

    She surprised herself and the entire mountain biking community when she took bronze in Canberra. I became the first African woman to receive a medal at a mountain biking world championship and I proved to myself that I had what it takes to achieve my lifelong dreams. It was a very special moment for me.

    Is she ever frightened? The very nature of cross-country mountain biking is scary, she says. Its a sport where every second counts and there is no room for error. It is intense and pressured, and requires immense mental capacity when you enter an obstacle at 180 beats per minute.

    Her most challenging course is the rock garden on the Pietermaritzburg world cup course. Riders have to negotiate what I can best describe as a waterfall of rocks down a steep and seemingly never-ending slope. One wrong placement of the front wheel and the result could be catastrophic. Many years and crashes later, I am still scared when entering this obstacle.

    Future goals include participating in the World Championships in Andorra, between France and Spain, later this year and, of course, to be selected for the Rio Olympics in 2016. My lifelong dream is to stand on the podium at the Olympic Games. I was born with this dream, and being selected for Rio is just one of the stepping stones on the way.

  • RETREAT

    26 | SPICE | August 2015

    TEXT SHELLEY SEID

    Situated on one of South Africas best-known stud farms, in a spectacular garden, Hartford House is a country hotel with a history. Louis Botha took over command of the Boer forces at the foot of the farm in 1899; General Dawid Joubert signed for his copy of the Treaty of Vereeniging at Summerhill at the end of hostilities in 1902, and had his troops plant the entrance avenue as a commemoration; and Hartford has hosted Jan Smuts and Sir Winston Churchill. SPICE spoke to owner Mick Goss and GM Duncan Bruce. Whose idea was Hartford House? The conviction which led to the conversion of our home into a hotel came from Micks wife, Cheryl. She felt that once the children had completed their schooling, this heritage gem could serve no better purpose than to be committed to the use of the public of this country and its international visitors.Why does it work?Hartford is part of the Summerhill Estate and together they attract 70 to 80 people a day, which converts to more than 30 000 visitors annually arguably the most visited hospitality destination in the Midlands. Hartford has an exceptional reputation for its food. Former head chefs include Richard Carstens and Jackie Cameron, who piloted the restaurant into the national top 10. The current chef, Constantijn Hanhndiek, is a finalist in the San Pellegrino Young Chef of the Year.What makes it di erent?It is the only world-class hotel, on a world-class

    stud farm, in the world. Summerhill Stud has been the champion racehorse-breeding establishment in South Africa nine consecutive times in an era when the landscape is heavily populated by billionaires. The estate is 3 000 acres, populated not only by horses but by a large variety of game species.Where are your guests from?Our mix includes strong followings from Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal and, more recently, the Western Cape during winter. Our tra c is about 80% local and 20% foreign. That changes to roughly 60% local and 40% foreign in the warmer months. Do guests come back? Our biggest marketing tool is word of mouth. We have many return guests, some of whom have been coming back consecutively for the past 10 years, staying in the same suites and, remarkably, wanting the same menu. Average duration of stays?Our weekends are generally based on a two-night stay. During the o season our midweek stays are one night, and three to four nights in season.

    What recurring feedback do you get?Thank you for your warm hospitality, world-class food, interesting wine selection and beautiful surroundings.How do you hit the service balance between privacy and attention? We need to respect our guests privacy, but its also extremely important that we get to know you. In that way we are able to anticipate your needs and o er you warm and engaging service.Oddest request or behaviour? We have often transformed our racetrack to host mini race days for birthday celebrations. We even have a commentator and a betting tote. Particular point of pride?Hartfords traditional dance troupe, the iNgobamakhosi, is the national champion and has ranked second and third in the world. Last August, the group wowed audiences at the Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo.Dont miss?The dinner and wine pairing, its a culinary delight. The senior food critic for Europe at the Wall Street Journal, Bruce Palling, proclaimed Hartford one of the top three country restaurants in the world.Any new developments? Hartford is engaged in a major makeover of its famous gardens. As part of the project we are developing an enchanting tea house. Had any celebs popping in lately?Heads of state, government ministers, captains of business and sports celebrities are among the regular clientele.Costs?From R770 to R1 980 per person per night, bed and breakfast. Contact 033-263-2713

    Hartford House has horses, heritage, horticulture, hedonism and some of the fi nest food in the Midlands

    BREED APART

    weve gone from bundu bashers to executives

    TEXT MASOOD BOOMGAARD

    PHOTOGRAPHY ROGAN WARD

    Best 4x4xFar? Maybe, but Land Rovers of the 21st century also

    have more than a veneer of top-level luxury

    DISCO FEVER

    MOTORING

    Not that long ago, when someone mentioned Land Rover, many people would have thought bare-boned, rugged, bundu-bashing 4x4. And while off-road tenacity is still very much part of the Landy DNA, the brand has gradually embraced a more premium image.

    Not too long ago, Land Rovers were seldom equipped with basics such as airconditioning and power steering. These days, however, there isnt a feature you wont find in even entry-level models.

    And Land Rovers product range is continuously, intelligently expanding to meet the demands of a discerning clientele.

    The Discovery Sport is the latest addition. Its significant for many reasons, the most important being that its the first time Land Rover has slapped the sport badge on the Discovery.

    The vehicle is handsomely styled, taking its design cues from the popular Evoque, but while it may look sophisticated it has serious off-road credentials, thanks mainly to its terrain-response system. Its the sort of vehicle that satisfies both hardcore off-roaders and soccer moms.

    Its been out two months. Were into our third month of sales, says Trevor Clack of CMH Land Rover Umhlanga. Its a welcome addition to the Land Rover range. The response

    has been very good. We had orders placed many months ago.

    Clack says the Discovery Sport is just one of many exciting new products the car maker will introduce in the next few years, including a replacement for the legendary Defender.

    Our client base has grown from bundu bashers to high-level executives who want something thats large and dual purpose. Were operating in the luxury car market, so everything has to be well appointed.

    Clack says its the Discovery Sports features that excite him most.

    There has been a lot of emphasis on progressive technology, features we dont really see in this country, like 360-degree cameras and terrain-response driving programmes, for example, that are unique to Land Rover.

    With each production year, new features are introduced. Theres a lot of luxury.

    Clack says the Discovery Sport stays true to Land Rovers heritage. Part of Land Rover history is off-roading, and every Land Rover has a certain off-roading capability. There is an expectation that my Land Rover can go where no other car can go.

    Reasons to buy the Discovery Sport? Fuel efficiency, power and performance, and the sensational nine-speed automatic gearbox. But most of all, says Clack, its fun to drive.

    August 2015 | SPICE | 27

  • INTERVIEW

    28 | SPICE | August 2015

    PHOTOGRAPHY TEBOGO LETSIE

    Alan Khan, who earlier this year was inducted into the South African Radio Hall of Fame, has a story for everything. From anecdotes about people he has interviewed to tales of his trips abroad, Khan is a treasure trove of information.

    The sports-mad broadcaster has also had a stint on television, co-hosting a national breakfast show, and has emceed thousands of functions over the past 25 years.

    The Morningside home he shares with his educational psychologist wife Mariam Seedat and sons Nassir, 16, and Ameer, 13, o ers snapshots of his life.

    The travel books, for example, cover the destinations he and his family have visited, from Istanbul to China, Bali to Phuket. When the Mayans predicted the world would end in 2012, Khan took his family to the happiest place on Earth Disney World in Florida.

    He says a trip with his wife to Bali was their most romantic, a visit to Thailand the most fascinating cultural experience, a getaway to Victoria Falls his most disappointing, while a holiday in Beijing was the most disturbing.

    You cant be a pet lover if you visit there because of the animals you see. Its their way of life, but it just isnt for me. We try to avoid the tourist traps and find out what the locals are doing or where they are going. Thats the place to be.

    While a row of Planet Hollywood and Hard Rock Caf glasses, as well as Chinese vases, are touristy mementoes of their travels, several frames on their walls speak volumes of Khans true passion: broadcasting.

    As a youngster he picked up the skill of horseracing commentary by listening to the radio, and while he was studying at the then Technikon Natal, his o er to help a campus radio DJ carry a speaker led to him going on air. From campus radio, he joined Capital 604 in 1990, staying with the station for six years until it closed.

    A few days later he joined East Coast Radio, before moving to Jacaranda in Johannesburg. His return to KwaZulu-Natal two years ago to become senior director of corporate a airs at the Durban University of Technology coincided with his return to the airwaves.

    His signature sign-o , peace, love and radio, is displayed in another frame hanging on a wall as a reminder of his broadcasting history. It was a farewell gift from some of my former colleagues, says Khan.

    From Steve Jobs and Bob Marley in the old days to the doctors, lawyers and financial experts who feature on his current show on Lotus FM, Khan says his radio career has been an amazing experience.

    His ratings are up, and he says his mission to help and educate people through his talk shows has been accomplished.

    For the Everton and Beatles fan, being inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame was an emotional highlight of his career, matched by one of his most treasured possessions a book of comments from people with whom he has interacted over the years, compiled by his wife to mark the honour.

    For once in my life I was speechless, said Khan.

    RADIO GAGABroadcaster Alan Khan has come a long way from his days as a horseracing commentator in his pre-teens. Yasantha Naidoo listened as Khan turned on his broadcasting voice

    The KZN North Coast is booming.Come and feel the noise.

    Access to uShukela is excellent via the N2, M41and R102 and will soon be even better when the new four lane arterial into Cornubia is completed in 2015. Richards Bay is just 90 minutes away, Pinetown, Durban CBD and the harbour are no more than twenty minutes drive and King Shaka International is seven minutes down the road.

    Occupation is scheduled for February 2016 so if you want to join the boom, now is a very good time to do it. Please contact Ross Eigenmann on 083 321 6011, Kale Bagwandin on 073 469 4894 or view the electronic brochure at www.redefine.co.za.

    This dynamic region is a future platform for light industrial warehousing for industries focused on imported goods for redistribution and the export of finished goods to all parts of the globe.

    With both Richards Bay and the Dube TradePort already established as industrial development zones, the entire province is poised for explosive growth.

    In the heart of this north coast development is uShukela Industrial Park, a 27,350m2 mixed use greenfield site lying between Verulum, Mount Edgecombe and uMhlanga.

    This development is in a prime position within the Cornubia site and comprises sixteen mid-size industrial units between 900m2 and 3 000m2. Theyre ideal for light manufacturing, warehousing, logistics and similar applications. Final designs and fittings are flexible and will be in accordance with tenants needs.

    CH

    AR

    LIE

    BR

    AVO

    #42

    3-14

    Were not landlords. Were people.

    Job 423-14 Redefine_uShukela Spice Mag 297x235mm R1.indd 1 2015/08/17 2:57 PM

  • VISION

    30 | SPICE | August 2015

    ELA GANDHI is the granddaughter of Mahatma Gandhi. Her father, Manilall, ran the settlement

    Gandhi founded near Phoenix at the turn of the last century. Ela runs the Gandhi Development Trust

    TEXT GREG ARD PHOTOGRAPHY VAL ADAMSON

    PHOENIX RISING

    With which historical figure do you most identify? Gandhi. I keep reading his works. I also admire Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela and Chief Albert Luthuli. My dad knew him well.What is your idea of perfect happiness? Something you can find within yourself, but only when you see the happiness around you.What is your greatest fear? Its for the world. Theres so much inequality, which can lead to destruction. Unlimited a uence and consumption of resources is not sustainable. Materialism has to be curbed.What is the trait you most dislike in yourself? Sometimes I wish I had more courage.What is the trait you most dislike in others? Materialism. When do you lie? Sometimes to protect people in simple things, to avoid hurting them.Which phrase do you overuse? You know.What is your greatest regret? That I moved out of the Phoenix Settlement (established by Gandhi in 1904 and burnt down in 1985). Maybe I could have saved it.The love of your life? My children and grandchildren. I also have a deep attachment to the Phoenix Settlement.Which talent would you most like to have? I would like to be able to sing and paint and draw.When and where are you happiest? Right now.What is your state of mind? Peaceful.If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be? I would be more involved in providing real services to people who are struggling. Id like to do more with my hands. I often wish Id become a doctor.What is your most treasured possession? At 74 I am reaching the other end of the stick, as they say. As you become greyer you shed attachment to material things. I have given away the things I have treasured, collections from my mother and grandfather. I spend three-quarters of the day on my computer. It has everything on its memory so I suppose it is prized, but Im not attached to it. I have s