Defining the Urban Edge - A Guide to its Implementation for Sustainable Development

U Govindjee*

PER / PELJ - Pioneer in peer-reviewed, open access online law publications

Author Urmila Govindjee

Affiliation North-West University South Africa

Email attorneysoni@gmail.com

Date Submitted 8 February 2022

Date Revised 3 May 2022

Date Accepted 3 May 2022

Date published 7 June 2022

Series Editor Prof AA du Plessis

Section Editor Dr IL Owosuyi

How to cite this article

Govindjee U "Defining the Urban Edge - A Guide to its Implementation for Sustainable Development" PER / PELJ 2021(24) - DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/1727-3781/2022/v25i0a13227

Copyright

DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/1727-3781/2021/v24i0a13227

Abstract

As relics of the legacy of apartheid, the boundaries of cities have

Online ISSN 1727-3781

Keywords

Urban edge; urban development boundary; urban growth boundary; sprawl; apartheid planning; section 24 of the Constitution; environmental law; spatial planning law; South Africa

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1 Introduction

In general, boundaries mark the transition between different regimes or different systems, and this is nowhere more evident than in the divide between the rural and the urban at the edge of a city.1 When one is defining and describing the physical form and extent of a city, its edge or boundary provides the most obvious indication of its extent and shape.2 Statistical definitions of cities rely upon how their boundaries are defined.3 Such a boundary can be referred to as an urban edge, an urban development boundary or an urban growth boundary, or by a variety of other designations.

* Dr Urmila Govindjee (Soni) BA LLB LLD. Consultant at BDLS Attorneys, Port Elizabeth, Eastern Cape, South Africa. Doctoral researcher, North-West University, South Africa. E Mail: attorneysoni@gmail.com. ORCiD: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6117-7342. This article draws on the author’s doctoral thesis presented in the Faculty of Law, North-West University.

1 Batty and Longley Fractal Cities 164.

2 Batty and Longley Fractal Cities 164.

3 Batty and Longley Fractal Cities 164.

4 The National Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998 (NEMA) addresses environmental governance and environmental management issues in detail. It does not refer to an urban edge specifically, but there is a reference to it in the definition of "urban areas" referred to in the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Regulations published in terms of NEMA. See GN R982 in GG 38282 of 4 December 2014.

5 In MEC for Environmental Affairs and Development Planning v Clairisons CC 2013 6 SA 235 (SCA) (hereinafter the Clairisons case) the urban edge was described as "a planning tool" that serves as a guide in "restricting the outward growth of urban settlements". In Blue Crane Country Estate (Pty) Ltd v National Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (3925/2014) [2015] ZAGPPHC 149 (23 March 2015) para 35 the urban edge was viewed as a zoning category with the municipality having the prerogative to decide regarding it. In the 2012 Cape Town Spatial Development Framework (SDF) (City of Cape Town Spatial Development Framework) it is a boundary drawn to phase urban growth appropriately in the medium to long term.

6 NEMA addresses details of environmental governance and environmental management issues and in that context refers to the urban edge. NEMA does not refer to an urban edge specifically, but there is a reference to it in the definition of "urban areas" referred to in the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Regulations published in terms of NEMA. See GN R982 in GG 38282 of 4 December 2014.

The urban edge is not defined in any legislation4 and there appears to be no standard definition of the term,5 which needs to be defined from a legal perspective. While its purpose, legal status and enforceability are not specifically dealt with in legislation, there are policy documents and guidelines that refer to the urban edge.6 The on-going management of the urban edge is also relevant. Some clarity and a better understanding of the term are necessary as the urban edge is an integral part of spatial planning

in South African law and has even been the subject of Constitutional Court litigation.7

7 See Wary Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Stalwo (Pty) Ltd 2009 1 SA 337 (CC). See also Shelfplett 47 (Pty) Ltd v MEC for Environmental Affairs and Development Planning 2012 3 SA 441 (WCC) (hereinafter the Shelfplett case) and the Clairisons case.

8 NEMA defines environment as "... the surroundings within which humans exist and that are made up of: (i) the land, water and atmosphere of the earth; (ii) micro-organisms, plant and animal life; (iii) any part or combination of (i) and (ii)" and the relationships "among and between them; and (iv) the physical, chemical, aesthetic and cultural properties and conditions of the foregoing that influence human health and well-being".

9 Sections 2 and 23(2) of NEMA; Bray 1998 SAJELP 1-9.

10 Section 42 of the Spatial Planning and Land Use Management Act 16 of 2013 (SPLUMA) stipulates that all planning decisions by local authorities must be consistent with national and provincial policies; SPLUMA further stipulates that NEMA, and environmental legislation must be complied with.

11 It was the apartheid laws that caused this segregated system relating to the ownership of land. One of the Acts that applied was the Black Land Act 27 of 1913.

12 Van Wyk Planning Law 24. For a history of the land legislation measures in South Africa, see Pienaar Land Reform ch 3.

13 During the mid to late 1900s.

14 Coetzee 2012 Town Reg Plan 11.

15 See Strauss Right to the City; Van Wyk Planning Law 47, 50.

16 Coetzee 2012 Town Reg Plan 11. Separate areas were created in towns and cities for the exclusive use of Indians and Coloureds.

The aim of this article is to conduct a proper assessment and critical evaluation of the urban edge. It is necessary to consider the different interpretations of the urban edge and provide clarity regarding the objectives that the urban edge is expected to address as development must be socially, environmentally8 and economically sustainable.9 The recognition of environmental issues in the Spatial Planning and Land Use Management Act 16 of 2013 (SPLUMA) requires that cognisance must be taken of environmental considerations in planning decisions.10 Defining the urban edge will hopefully provide a guideline that may be used by municipalities when considering the demarcation of the urban edge and its management.

2 Historical legacies of apartheid

The colonial occupation of South Africa resulted in the use of land having a racial context11 as planning was done on a different basis for blacks and whites.12 As the apartheid system became more entrenched,13 the strict planning system became the tool to enforce and promote separate and fragmented development in urban areas.14 Areas for blacks were separated from those for whites and placed on the periphery of towns and cities.15 This "fragmented spatial pattern" based on race negatively impacted on socio-economic conditions and resulted in land-use segregation.16 The boundaries between their areas were not created with a concern for "green

belts" but were a direct result of a rigid system of apartheid during which suburban development began to flourish, urban sprawl thrived17 and inner cities deteriorated.18 The monetary implications of sprawl include increased costs of infrastructure, fuel and time spent travelling. A consequence of the specific racial context in planning, was the relatively low density in dominant white suburbia19 while black people were housed in crowded housing of an inferior quality in rural areas far from city centres or on the periphery of cities.20

17 Horn 2010 Eur Spat Res Policy 44; Britz and Meyer 2006 Town Plan Rev 206.

18 This was not planned decentralisation, but more haphazard decentralisation that created sprawl.

19 Van Wyk Planning Law 24.

20 Western Cape 2005 https://www.environment.gov.za/sites/default/files/docs/ provincialurbanedgeguideline.pdf Foreword.

21 Section 3 of the Subdivision of Agricultural Land Act 70 of 1970 prohibits the subdivision of agricultural land without first obtaining the necessary consent from the Minister of Agriculture. The ordinances that applied were the Town-planning and Townships Ordinance15 of 1986 (Transvaal); the Land Use Planning Ordinance 15 of 1985 (Cape); the Townships Ordinance 9 of 1969 (Orange Free State); and the Town Planning Ordinance 27 of 1949 (Natal).

22 Town-planning and Townships Ordinance 15 of 1986 (Transvaal); the Land Use Planning Ordinance 15 of 1985 (Cape); the Townships Ordinance 9 of 1969 (Orange Free State); and the Town Planning Ordinance 27 of 1949 (Natal). Only two of the provinces (Northern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal) adopted post-1994 legislation to deal with planning matters and the other provinces continue to utilise ordinances that were promulgated before our democracy. Also see Van Wyk 2010 PELJ 214; Cilliers and Schoeman 2008 WIT Trans Ecol Environ; City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Gauteng Development Tribunal 2010 6 SA 182 (CC).

23 Subdivision of Agricultural Land Act 70 of 1970.

24 The Town-planning and Townships Ordinance 15 of 1986 (Transvaal); the Land Use Planning Ordinance 15 of 1985 (Cape); the Townships Ordinance 9 of 1969 (Orange Free State); and the Town Planning Ordinance 27 of 1949 (Natal).

25 Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (the Constitution). The new government elected in 1994 had to consider changes to the fragmented, unequal and incoherent planning system which had developed under apartheid resulting in the promulgation of the Development Facilitation Act 67 of 1995 (DFA) and the Local Government Transition Act 209 of 1993 being enacted.

26 Van Wyk Planning Law 72. This transformation unfortunately did not translate into an equivalent change in "values and principles" from those based on racial differences to those based on equality.

In South Africa, the foundation or origins of the urban edge can be ascribed to the Subdivision of Agricultural Land Act21 and the various town planning ordinances22 that governed land use in urban areas and applied in South Africa prior to 1994. The Subdivision of Agricultural Land Act23 was used in rural areas while provincial ordinances were used in urban areas.24 With the coming into power of South Africa's first democratic government and as a direct consequence of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (the Constitution)25 South Africa witnessed a change in the law26 and

attempts were made to bridge the gap between "marginalised communities and wealthier areas".27 One of the first priorities of the post-apartheid government was a transformation strategy and the implementation of the Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP).28 Unfortunately, after 1994 the level of urban sprawl actually increased.29 This occurred because the South African government arranged large-scale lower income development in terms of the RDP on the periphery of cities, where land prices are usually much cheaper.30 The abolition of influx control31 in 1984 also contributed to spontaneous and often unauthorised settlement by previously disadvantaged communities seeking proximity to urban labour markets.32

27 Britz and Meyer 2006 Town Plan Rev 208.

28 . The post-apartheid government's priority or transformation strategy was the Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP). The RDP was an integrated, coherent socio-economic policy framework that sought to mobilise all people and the country's resources toward the final eradication of apartheid. The intention was to have a democratic, non-racial and non-sexist future for all South Africans.

29 Coetzee 2012 Town Reg Plan 10-20. Although it is almost two decades since transformation, the planning system in South Africa appears to be very good on paper but is still unable to facilitate the change and transformation required in the South African urban, regional and rural spaces and is still characterised by low-density urban sprawl, fragmented communities and spaces, and scattered impoverished informal settlements established in remote areas, far from employment opportunities, services and amenities. It seems that the apartheid legacy is living on although the new integrated planning system did seriously attempt (in some areas) to facilitate growth and development. It seems that the desired changes, restructuring and growth has not happened at the pace and in the spaces as recommended and required by government and planning policy. Also see Horn 2010 Eur Spat Res Policy 43.

30 Van Niekerk 2018 Town Reg Plan 71. This has reproduced and entrenched the apartheid spatial pattern of dormitory settlements in isolated locations.

31 In terms of the Abolition of Influx Control Act 68 of 1986.

32 Horn 2010 Eur Spat Res Policy 43.

33 Jansen van Rensburg and Campbell 2012 Urban Forum 61.

34 Department of Housing Urban Development Framework.

35 Rural Development Task Team Rural Development Framework.

36 Horn 2010 Eur Spat Res Policy 46.

37 The DFA was promulgated to facilitate and speed up the implementation of reconstruction and development programmes and projects in relation to land, and in so doing to lay down general principles governing land development throughout the

When the negotiations to end apartheid began there was no legislated urban edge or urban growth boundary.33 The rights created in the Constitution and the implementation of policies such as the Urban Development Framework (1996)34 and the Rural Development Framework (1997)35 were aimed at correcting past distorted spatial patterns and providing opportunities to poor communities.36 Legislation in the form of the (now repealed) Development Facilitation Act (DFA)37 introduced general

Republic of South Africa with the aim of ensuring integrated and sustainable land development practices.

38 Section 3(1)(c) of the DFA.

39 Section 3(1)(c)(vi) of the DFA. An explanatory document to the Act explains that the way to correct urban sprawl is to plan for new developments to take place in the already developed areas either on vacant land or through the re-development of existing properties. Further mention is made of associated issues such as the proximity of places of residence to places of employment, shorter travelling distances, urban decay in inner cities, the sustained protection of the environment and the optimisation of existing public transport systems, engineering infrastructure and community facilities. The issue of growth management, and specifically the containment of urban sprawl, was therefore a priority item on the post-1994 planning agenda and was even taken up in legislation.

40 Britz and Meyer 2006 Town Plan Rev 211. The issues of growth management and specifically the containment of urban sprawl were researched by the Gauteng Provincial Government, which came to this conclusion.

41 The DFA is now defunct. See Oranje and Van Wyk 2019 Town Reg Plan 119.

42 City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Gauteng Development Tribunal 2010 6 SA 182 (CC).

43 Spatial Planning and Land Use Management Act 16 of 2013 (SPLUMA).

44 Van Wyk Planning Law 2.

45 The DFA set out a new planning environment through the Land Development Objectives which authorities had to prepare and was intended to determine the nature, scale and financing of the sustainable development of the local authority.

46 Section 24 of NEMA.

47 In terms of s 25 of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 (MSA) Integrated Development Plans (IDPs) must be prepared by every municipality in the country on a five-year basis and be annually reviewed. The IDP is the written plan that results from the integrated development planning process. It is the principal strategic planning instrument guiding and informing all planning, management, investment, development, and implementation decisions and actions in the local area and supersedes all other plans that guide local development.

48 Section 12 of SPLUMA.

principles for land development38 providing that all administrative practices and laws relating to land development in South Africa should "discourage the phenomenon of urban sprawl" in urban areas and contribute to the development of more integrated and compact towns and cities.39 The urban edge at that stage gained popularity as a tool to address these principles.40 Although serious attempts were made to resolve the planning issues created by the apartheid regime, progress was negatively impacted as the RDP was tainted with corruption and the (now repealed) DFA41 became the object of a Constitutional Court dispute that resulted in Chapters V and VI of the Act being declared invalid and eventually led to the Act's demise.42

SPLUMA43 replaced the DFA44 and is significant as it was introduced to address the inequalities of the apartheid planning system. In addition, various new planning tools were implemented such as land development objectives,45 environmental impact assessments (EIAs),46 integrated development plans (IDPs),47 spatial development frameworks (SDFs),48 the designation of different types of protected areas, urban edge lines and

marine set-back delineations. To this one can add other newly introduced principles and policies49 such as the international Sustainable Development Goals 2015-2030 Goal 1150 and the New Urban Agenda51 and nationally, the National Development Plan (NDP),52 the National Spatial Development Framework (NSDF)53 and the Integrated Urban Development Framework (IUDF).54

49 It is made clear that these planning tools are intended to bridge the gap between marginalised communities and persons living in wealthier areas.

50 These are goals of the United Nations Development Programme calling for action and end poverty, to protect the planet and to ensure that all people enjoy peace and prosperity (UN Date unknown http://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/ sustainable-development-goals/).

51 UN 2016 https://habitat3.org/the-new-urban-agenda/.

52 NPC National Development Plan 2030. The National Development Plan (NDP) is a long-term South African development plan developed by the National Planning Commission that aims to eliminate poverty and reduce inequality by 2030.

53 Department of Rural Development and Land Reform 2019 https://static.pmg.org.za/200120Draft_NSDF.pdf (the Draft NSDF).

54 Department of Cooperative Governance Integrated Urban Development Framework.

55 See the comprehensive table of legislation in Retief and Cilliers "Land-use Management and Planning" 567-569 and the legislation referred to by Van Wyk Planning Law 122-144. Note also the "spatial complexity" of land use management as illustrated by the case study in Retief and Cilliers "Land-use Management and Planning" 573-575.

56 Retief and Cilliers "Land-use Management and Planning" 563; Laubscher et al SPLUMA 6.

57 The issues of growth management and specifically the containment of urban sprawl were researched by the Gauteng Provincial Government, which came to this conclusion; Britz and Meyer 2006 Town Plan Rev 211.

58 Horn 2018 Plan Perspect 1, Abstract.

As the previous dispensation in South Africa had created an extraordinarily complex legal framework for land use management relating to the different segregated areas, the process of repealing and replacing the "plethora55 of segregation-based legislation" has taken much longer than anticipated.56 However, it became clear that "urban sprawl' had to be curtailed. After international case studies had been consulted, the idea of an urban edge was proposed57 as a growth management tool to achieve a compact city form, and the implementation of the urban edge was expected to be the solution to the problem.

3 The urban edge in South Africa

After 1994 it became necessary to consider the principles of compaction and urban growth management so that transformation of the "inefficient and fragmented landscape" that had been inherited could take place.58 However, explicit reference to the "urban edge" and to the use of urban

edges in South African planning and environmental legislation, policy documents, guidelines and regulations are sparse.59

59 Horn 2018 Plan Perspect 3.

60 Pekelharing Phenomenon of the Urban Edge 124.

61 Previously this was done in terms of the MSA and the Local Government: Municipal Planning and Performance Management Regulations (GN R796 in GG 22605 of 24 August 2001), which are much older regulations and have been replaced by SPLUMA.

62 Horn 2010 Eur Spat Res Policy 48.

63 The IDP (which incorporates the SDF, which in turn depicts the urban edge) is in terms of the MSA the written plan that results from the integrated development planning process. It is the principal strategic planning instrument guiding and informing all planning, management, investment, development, and implementation decisions and actions in the local area and supersedes all other plans that guide local development. Britz and Meyer 2006 Town Plan Rev 214. Also see Van der Berg "Pursuit of Sustainable Development Goal 11"; Van der Berg Municipal Planning Law and Policy; Van Wyk Planning Law.

64 Horn 2010 Eur Spat Res Policy 48.

65 Regulation 2(4) of the Local Government: Municipal Planning and Performance Management Regulations, which deals with the status of IDPs. These regulations are much older regulations and were created before SPLUMA and are therefore no longer relevant.

66 Shelfplett case para 61.

67 From a municipal legislative perspective, this is perhaps a reason why urban edges need to be depicted on an SDF.

Usually, different developments are prescribed inside the urban edge and outside the urban edge. The inside of the urban edge generally includes higher densities, residential developments, industrial and commerce sectors with high traffic circulation and a need for substantial infrastructure, whereas on the outside of the urban edge usually only rural types of development are permitted.60 There is an option to indicate an urban edge in a municipal SDF drawn up as part of an IDP.61 Municipalities were advised by Government62 to reflect the urban edge in their first round of IDPs. The urban edge thus gained legal standing on a municipal level.63 SPLUMA now regulates the formulation of an SDF and the inclusion of a planned urban boundary or urban edge.64 The requirement that an IDP must (through the SDF) reflect the spatial form of the city65 leads to a more certain status for the urban edge. This gives it the "subordinate legislation" status proposed by Rogers AJ in the Shelfplett case.66 Indicating an urban edge in the SDF compels decision-makers to have regard to it.67

The implementation of the urban edge in South Africa is an indication of the multi-faceted objectives it is expected to address in relation to spatial planning. For a proper assessment and critical evaluation of the urban edge it is important to consider its various definitions and ascertain what an ideal definition of the concept of the urban edge would be.

4 Existing descriptions, comments and definitions of the urban edge

The urban edge has been defined and described in many ways. Most descriptions seem to focus on a line drawn on a map that leaves no room for the transition from urban uses to more rural uses.68 The word "rural" suggests remote farming areas, and "urban" suggests the economic activities associated with the built environment.69 They are usually viewed as separate and exclusive.70

68 However, this transition aspect is referred to in the Shelfplett case and is included in the writer's definition. It is also a concept that is included in the Cape Metropolitan Council Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework 37. This SDF combines urban edge lines and transition zones in its approach to urban edge protection, farm uses, social and demographic characteristics.

69 Department of Cooperative Governance Integrated Urban Development Framework 25.

70 Department of Cooperative Governance Integrated Urban Development Framework 25.

71 Van Wyk Planning Law 238-239.

72 City of Cape Town Spatial Development Framework.

73 Horn 2010 Eur Spat Res Policy 45-46.

74 Horn Analysis of an Urban Edge 6-7. In her view the urban edge resembles the green belt areas of Howard's Garden Cities (Howard Garden Cities of Tomorrow).

75 Cilliers 2009 IJHSS 942.

76 Van Wyk Planning Law 239 agrees with the view taken in Blue Crane Country Estate (Pty) Ltd v National Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (3925/2014) [2015] ZAGPPHC 149 (23 March 2015) para 35, where the court said that it was a constitutional prerogative of a municipality to make such a decision.

77 Tonkin Sustainable Medium-density Housing; and also, Jansen van Rensburg and Campbell 2012 Urban Forum 68.

Different definitions of the urban edge have been proposed by various writers, thereby confusing the issue. In a simple glossary definition explaining the concept, Van Wyk71 accepts that the "urban edge" is a zoning category and defines it as a boundary that has been identified, which includes "all existing and proposed future areas for urban development" in which a local authority is/will be able to provide services. The Cape Town SDF72 defines the urban edge as a "policy tool" to be "used by provincial and local planning authorities in South Africa, to contain urban sprawl and promote densification". Horn73 defines the "edge" as an institutional boundary for the "purpose of containing physical development and sprawl and re-directing growth towards a more integrated, compact and efficient urban form".74 Cilliers75 refers to the urban development boundary or urban edge as a zoning tool76 used to direct urban growth towards a more sustainable form, while Tonkin77 defines it as a "polygon drawn around a

city".78 Marin,79 on the other hand, defines the urban edge as a legally enforceable line that separates developable land from rural land around cities and thereby allows local governments to direct the type and timing of development projects. Britz and Meyer80 describe it as an "urban growth boundary" or as a long-term boundary serving as a proactive growth management tool that seeks to contain, control, direct or phase growth to promote more compact, contiguous urban development. The Central Spatial Development Plan of the eThekwini Municipality also regards the urban edge as a line or boundary beyond which development and densification should be curtailed to ensure that there is an area of rural periphery or hinterland which is different in character to the urban areas and also has different servicing needs and different lifestyles.81

78 Tonkin Sustainable Medium-density Housing. The urban edge bans developments outside it and manages and controls the "outer limits of urban expansion of a town". Her view is also that it slows urban growth by banning development on the urban fringe.

79 Marin 2007 Urban Aff Rev.

80 Britz and Meyer 2006 Town Plan Rev 207.

81 eThekwini Municipality 2009 http://www.durban.gov.za/Documents/City_Govern ment/Development_Planning_Management/Draft%20Central%20Spatial%20Development%20Plan.%20June%202009.pdf para 4 16.

82 Van Wyk Planning Law 238-239.

83 Horn 2010 Eur Spat Res Policy 49. The urban edge has an important role to play in ensuring that a city is compact and in eliminating sprawl. As such, its demarcation and management are vital from both an environmental and a planning perspective; what happens on either side of the line is an important consideration, as are the linkages between the areas.

84 The Draft NSDF 147.

These different definitions of the urban edge include concepts such as: (a) the urban edge must act as a growth boundary; (b) it must be a conservation tool; (c) a tool to enforce density targets and development patterns within a specific time horizon; (d) be a planning tool or a zoning tool; or (e) a tool to protect and preserve the agricultural, rural and natural assets, to mention a few.82 It is said that the urban edge must not be merely a guideline that is moving increasingly closer to becoming "just-a-line-on-a-map".83

These viewpoints are further expanded in the NSDF, that describes the urban edge as a "line that is used as a border" that distinguishes between an area/region that is regarded as "part of a city or town" and its "surrounding natural or rural area" with its primary purpose being to "contain the urban".84 This means that urban development is not permitted and municipal services are not provided outside/beyond the line. What is clear

in the draft NSDF is that "sprawl [must] be prevented by using urban edges".85

85 The Draft NSDF 147.

86 Horn 2010 Eur Spat Res Policy 50. A more scientific way of considering when an extension is necessary is a better way to manage the urban edge. This is preferred to the decisions about the urban edge’s being influenced by political whims and fancies.

87 The Clairisons case para 12.

88 The Shelfplett case paras 24-28.

89 Knysna Municipality 2017 https://vdocuments.mx/document/draft-knysna-spatial-development-framework-figure-16-knysna-spatial-vision.html. In this case the policy decision was not to encourage commercial development in that area of the city.

90 Durbanville Community Forum v Minister for Environmental Affairs and Development Planning Provincial Government Western Cape 2015 2 All SA 187 (WCC).

There is also the opinion that the urban edge was not meant to be a strict management tool but rather a "broad guideline for future development proposals and short-term control measures that would ultimately fall away" as more detailed growth management approaches and practices are developed and refined.86

5 Court decisions regarding the urban edge

Apart from the urban edge being referred to in policies and plans, the courts have also had to make decisions regarding the urban edge. The urban edge was discussed in MEC for Environmental Affairs and Development Planning v Clairison's CC87 (hereinafter the Clairison's case) and was referred to as a "planning tool that serves as a guide in restricting the outward growth of urban settlements". In Shelfplett 47 (Pty) Ltd v MEC for Environmental Affairs and Development Planning88 (hereinafter the Shelfplett case) the court referred to the Western Cape Urban Edge Guideline and its definition of an urban edge as "a line drawn around an urban area as a growth boundary" that marks the transition between rural and urban land uses. The urban edge was central to the decision in the Shelfplett case. According to this case, while the concept was not defined in the Knysna Municipality SDF, it did confirm that the objective of the urban edge or edge demarcation was to provide a clear direction on where growth should be discouraged and where it should be encouraged.89

In the matter of Durbanville Community Forum v Minister of Environmental Affairs and Development Planning Provincial Government Western Cape90 approval of a property development outside the urban edge was challenged as various planning documents did not encourage urban development on property outside the urban edge. The court held that other factors and unique circumstances justified the decision by the local authority to permit

the development.91 Making a decision relating to the urban edge is classed as administrative action that may not be interfered with92 if it is a bona fide and rational decision of a local authority.93

91 Durbanville Community Forum v Minister for Environmental Affairs and Development Planning Provincial Government Western Cape 2015 2 All SA 187 (WCC) para 25.

92 Section 33 of the Constitution. Also see Holness "Right to Just Administrative Action" 219-223. All urban edge, planning and environmental decisions must comply with this principle.

93 Shelfplett case. Also see Philippi Horticultural Area Food and Farming Campaign v MEC for Local Government, Environmental Affairs and Development Planning: Western Cape 2020 3 SA 486 (WCC).

94 UN-Habitat 2019 https://unhabitat.org/sites/default/files/documents/2019-06/effectiveness_of_planning_law_in_sub_sahara_bookweb-un_habitat.pdf.

95 Njuguna et al Effectiveness of Planning Law.

96 Horn 2010 Eur Spat Res Policy 46.

Although these court decisions provide good guidelines to the interpretation of the urban edge, they do not stipulate how the urban edge should be implemented. This aspect will be addressed in the following paragraph.

6 Implementing the urban edge successfully

The UN conducted a survey in 201994 to assess the effectiveness of planning law in sub-Saharan Africa. One of the criteria chosen to aid in this assessment was the existence of an urban growth boundary or urban edge that separates urban or built-up areas from non-urban land such as agrarian, forested, and environmentally protected land.95 In the UN survey the urban edge is regarded as an indicator of a country's policy of compactness. The survey distinguishes between an "explicit boundary line" (set by either a spatial plan or a regulatory instrument) and an "implicit boundary line" that is established by the accumulated boundaries of land use zones in spatial plans, and the two South African cities surveyed were found to have explicit boundaries in the form of urban edges.

The mere existence of an urban edge is no guarantee of its successful implementation. There are additional factors that need to be considered that impact on its success or failure. For successful during implementation local authorities must carefully reconsider their growth management strategies and focus on promoting concepts previously ignored, like infill development, redevelopment, densification, mixed-use development and streamlining their planning administration procedures.96 It has been suggested globally that to resolve the related problems of urban sprawl something more than the mere declaration of an urban edge or development boundary is

required.97 A growth management strategy may need a range of tools as opposed to merely the delineation of an urban edge. Mechanisms that support the urban edge in ensuring the containment and direction of urban growth should be promoted.98 If the urban edge becomes part of a "comprehensive, multi-disciplinary" framework that "integrates all development disciplines"99 this will assist in making it successful.100 In addition, local authorities must be mindful of the fact that the conservation of nature and the environment represents one dimension of sustainability and that they should strive to achieve a balance between social, environmental, economic and even cultural considerations to make a city sustainable.101

97 Sinclair-Smith 2014 Urban Forum. It is advisable that the urban edge or urban growth boundary should not be implemented in isolation but should form a part of other growth management tools aimed at improving the "quality and environmental sustainability of urban areas". Also see Horn 2010 Eur Spat Res Policy 46; Pekelharing Phenomenon of the Urban Edge 126.

98 Horn 2010 Eur Spat Res Policy 46.

99 Horn 2010 Eur Spat Res Policy 48.

100 Cilliers and Schoeman 2008 WIT Trans Ecol Environ 85. Integrated development planning emerged as a distinct approach to planning, and the objectives of integrated planning were entrenched in core policy and legal documents including the Growth, Employment and Redistribution Programme (1994), the Constitution, the White Paper on Local Government (1998) and the Green Paper on Development Planning (1999).

101 Du Plessis and Van der Bergh 2014 Stell LR. This aspect will be discussed in more detail in relation to the resolution of the conflict between property development and the environment.

102 UN 2019 https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/content/documents/24797GSDR_ report_2019.pdf. This indicates that the focus worldwide is on compact cities.

103 Pekelharing Phenomenon of the Urban Edge 126. See also Nelson and Peterman 2000 JPER; Jansen van Rensburg and Campbell 2012 Urban Forum.

104 Cilliers 2009 IJHSS 942.

105 Department of Cooperative Governance Integrated Urban Development Framework 25.

The sound use of an urban edge would promote the effective use of infrastructure, make a town more compact by increasing its density and reducing urban sprawl, and would at the same time protect the environment.102 The urban edge should direct urban growth with a view to limiting urban expansion and ensuring compact urban environments even close to the edge.103 The urban edge should, as stated above, ensure planned urban areas in contrast to unplanned areas that are characterised by urban sprawl and insufficient infrastructure.104

It is now clear to planners that there are interdependencies between urban and rural areas that should be enhanced.105 Agricultural land outside the urban edge is usually reserved for agricultural purposes and protected and

permitting planned development around this area on the urban side may be considered to create meaningful integration and strengthen linkages.106 The suggestion is that the development areas inside the urban edge but close to the periphery may need to become integrated with better transport, communications, and migration.107 These strong linkages would enhance growth and the flow of resources so that they would have major economic and social benefits.108 This adaptation would mean that in certain unique circumstances a qualitative zoning approach might have to be considered rather than a focus on separation.109

106 Geyer et al 2011 Town Reg Plan 52. Cape Town's Phillipi Horticultural Area is a successful agricultural area in the heart of Cape Town but is deemed to be outside the urban edge to protect it.

107 The IDP, a five-year plan, focusses on linkages (not separateness) and it can help guide and reframe how development occurs in rural and urban areas.

108 Department of Cooperative Governance Integrated Urban Development Framework 29.

109 Geyer et al 2011 Town Reg Plan 52.

110 Landman Sustainable Urban Village Concept.

111 The concept of sustainable development is specifically included by the writer in the suggested definition of the urban edge.

112 Jansen van Rensburg and Campbell 2012 Urban Forum 61; Wiley Urban Edge 37.

113 Jansen van Rensburg and Campbell 2012 Urban Forum 68. Also see Du Plessis and Van der Berg 2014 Stell LR, who are of the opinion that in Le Sueur v Ethekwini Municipality (9714/11) [2013] ZAKZPHC 6 (30 January 2013) the court did not explain the legal nature and meaning of "open space", which would have helped with the creation of a sustainable network of developed and undeveloped land that will support the interaction between ecological, social and economic activities.

114 Sinclair-Smith 2014 Urban Forum 313.

Landman110 regards sustainable development in a city as the process of maintaining a dynamic balance between the demands of the people and that which is ecologically possible.111 The objectives of the urban environment must include spatial, environmental and transportation factors. to ensure a balance between "the built-up areas and the open spaces as well as a balance between consumption and resources".112

A well-managed city or town is said to be one that "finds a balance between the restraint of development (for the compactness of the city) and sprawl (which is often driven by the cost of land and results in the spreading out of the city or town)".113

Managing urban edges presents challenges for local authorities as it is difficult to determine how much land should be included inside the boundary.114 An urban edge demarcation must have land reserves to accommodate urban growth and if the boundary is drawn "too tightly" it can stifle economic growth (and lead to land price increases). On the other hand, the inclusion of too much land inside the urban edge may result in

"unchecked urban sprawl and its associated environmental, social and financial costs".115

115 Sinclair-Smith 2014 Urban Forum 313.

116 Horn 2018 Plan Perspect 13. Approvals of Schaapkraal and Wescape in the Western Cape are examples of where this occurred. In fact, these approvals may have resulted in the notion of an urban edge losing much of its credibility.

117 Horn 2018 Plan Perspect 15.

118 Horn 2018 Plan Perspect 3.

119 Section 22(d) of SPLUMA makes it compulsory for municipalities to delineate possible expansion areas through the SDF and these expansion areas and the urban edge are accordingly delineated in the SDF.

120 Draft NSDF 21.

Approvals to extend the urban edge are criticised in certain cases for being political decisions that clearly go against the city's urban edge guidelines.116 They result in unwanted consequences such as reinforcing sprawl, initiating costly infrastructure, promoting the use of private vehicles or even promoting segregation by excluding poor and black people.117 Economic and political processes become open to negotiation and networking, with the state ending up "circumventing control and regulation".118

Resolving the conflict and shortcomings of the urban edge will mean adopting an acceptable definition that will include the relevant aspects referred to in section 24 of the Constitution and that is indicative of a compact and sustainable built environment that protects the natural environment.

7 Proposing an ideal definition of the urban edge

The demarcation and periodic review of the urban edge is an important and complex exercise. It was considered necessary to define the urban edge to avoid confusion relating to its implementation or review by a local authority. As the urban edge is sometimes depicted in a municipal SDF in terms of SPLUMA and is a planning tool,119 it is recommended that the definition be authorised by and included in SPLUMA. The proposed definition of this rather complex concept incorporates various aspects borrowed from other definitions. "Reviewable tool" and "transition area" are such aspects. However, the various definitions (including a definition of the urban edge in the NSDF)120 are lacking, because that they do not address issues such as "sustainability" and the "norms" that are set out in section 24 of the Constitution. The elements included in the writer's proposed definition are regarded as being integral to the definition of the urban edge.

Against this background, an apt definition of this rather complex concept121 is offered below. It incorporates the various recommended aspects of the urban edge and adds some that have so far been missing:122

121 Writer's own definition.

122 The various definitions referred to are not an exhaustive list. However, most definitions focus on different aspects of the urban edge rather than being all-encompassing.

123 An urban edge can be reviewed either periodically or when the SDF is updated every 5 years, or when an application is made for its extension. The use of the word "reviewable" also indicates that applications may be made to the local authority to review or make changes to it.

124 The suggestion that the urban edge is a "tool" is made by various writers including Cilliers 2009 IJHSS, Tonkin Sustainable Medium-density Housing, and Britz and Meyer 2006 Town Plan Rev.

125 Local government, as opposed to the province, in relation to the different roles of local government and provincial government in planning law in terms of the Constitution and in terms of SPLUMA.

126 Its correct implementation requires careful planning, proper training and ample support so that there is a clear understanding of the relevant policies and legislation. One of the necessities is public participation. According to Cilliers and Schoeman 2008 WIT Trans Ecol Environ 93, another is that the urban edge should be approached holistically before delineating it. Also see Sinclair-Smith 2014 Urban Forum 313. The dangers of demarcating it too tightly or too loosely must be considered carefully.

127 A transition is not a line on a map. Pekelharing Phenomenon of the Urban Edge 156 also recommends the use of this term. According to her, the vision of the urban edge as a transition zone increases the possibilities of development. Foregrounding this notion will ensure more effective and efficient planning for the future and optimise development in and outside the urban edge.

128 In the Western Cape Provincial Urban Edge Guideline, the urban edge is seen as a transition between rural and urban land uses.

129 UN 2019 https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/content/documents/24797GSDR_report_2019.pdf. This indicates that the focus worldwide is on compact cities; the City of Cape Town Spatial Development Framework and Horn Analysis of an Urban Edge 80 also refers to the purpose of the urban edge as being to contain sprawl and promote densification.

130 The concept is promoted by Britz and Meyer 2006 Town Plan Rev. Efficiency is important in a city and includes both planning and environmental efficiency ranging from the efficient use of infrastructure to ensuring that a correct mix or integration of development, environmental areas and agricultural areas is considered where suitable. The overall effect of this efficiency would be a prosperous and well-planned city. There is also the aspect of efficiency of governing the urban edge and ensuring that development occurs in accordance with it.

The urban edge (urban boundary or urban growth boundary) is a reviewable123 tool124 implemented by local government125 in planning law to carefully126 demarcate an area where a transition127 occurs from urban land use to rural land use128 in order to promote a compact129 and efficient130 town or city in

accordance with justifiable economic,131 social,132 and sustainable development norms133 as required in the Constitution134 and in terms of spatial development principles.

131 Van Niekerk 2018 Town Reg Plan. Case studies indicate that housing developments that are compact are likely to be less expensive than poorly located, sprawling housing developments. If a city is compact, this frees up resources for both urban residents and public-sector organisations.

132 An important aspect to consider in South Africa is affordable housing for the masses and how the implementation of the urban edge impacts on the land price for this purpose.

133 The concept of sustainable development is also suggested by Cilliers. This will re-enforce the environmental considerations when making a decision regarding this concept and could include cultural factors.

134 Apart from being in keeping with the terms of the Constitution, the concept should re-enforce the general ethos of the Constitution.

135 In City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Gauteng Development Tribunal 2010 6 SA 182 (CC) para 95 it was confirmed that the SDF was one of the core components of an IDP (that is created and must be reviewed every 5 years in terms of the MSA) and that the urban edge (or urban development boundary) was incorporated as a component of the SDF.

136 Section 153(a) of the Constitution states that every municipality must organise, plan and manage its administration, budgeting and planning processes to give priority to the basic needs of the community and to promote the social and economic development of the community. Also see Du Plessis 2017 LDD 250.

137 Horn Analysis of an Urban Edge.

138 Govindjee Addressing the Conflict Between Property Development and the Environment 286-291.

The NSDF and following it the municipal SDFs must take their cue from SPLUMA and should include the definition. Because of this, any decision taken by a local authority in connection with the implementation or review of an urban edge (either when the municipal SDF is updated every five years or when an application is made to extend the urban edge)135 must take cognisance of the following factors. In terms of section 153 of the Constitution,136 local authorities as opposed to provincial authorities have the final say regarding the urban edge as it forms a part of municipal planning. Abiding by this requirement would help resolve the issues of political interference presently faced by cities in South Africa with regard to urban edge decisions.137 It is also important that the urban edge must be implemented and managed in accordance with the principles of the Constitution, SPLUMA, the IDP, the draft NSDF, municipal SDFs, the NDP and the IUDF, any urban edge guidelines and frameworks as well as the environmental tools and policies promoted in the National Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998 (NEMA) for use by municipalities when making planning decisions.138

In addition, the implementation and management of the urban edge must promote a compact and efficient town or city and avoid sprawl.139 When a city is compact and efficient it is more prosperous and more liveable.140 It is a SPLUMA requirement that the drafting of the SDF (which may depict an urban edge) must consider all environmental management instruments that are applicable.141

139 Britz and Meyer 2006 Town Plan Rev 206. "Urban sprawl" is a term used to indicate "development patterns such as low residential densities, separation of land uses, the creation of single use environments, leapfrog development directing development away from city centres, automobile-dependent development, environments not conducive to public transport, as well as development at the periphery of an urban area at the expense of its core". In South Africa the DFA was the first Act that discouraged urban sprawl and encouraged environmentally sustainable land development. It has strong similarities to the concept of a "compact city" in international terminology.

140 UN 2019 https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/content/documents/ 24797GSDR_report_2019.pdf. The focus worldwide is for cities to be compact.

141 Sections 12-22 of SPLUMA. Environmental instruments such as environmental management frameworks (EMFs) and strategic environmental assessments (SEAs) are crucial when making decisions regarding an urban edge. Also see Van Wyk "Law on Planning and the Environment" 1150.

142 The principles of NEMA guide local government in the interpretation, administration and implementation of any law relating to the protection or management of the environment. They act as a "roadmap" and steer municipalities so that they can fulfil their developmental role and environmental governance obligations. See MEC for Agriculture, Conservation, Environment and Land Affairs v Sasol Oil (Pty) Ltd 2006 5 SA 483 (SCA). Also see Kidd Environmental Law 39-40. According to Kidd, Fuel Retailers Association of Southern Africa v Director-General: Environmental Management, Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Environment, Mpumalanga Province 2007 6 SA 4 (CC) has clarified and endorsed the principles of NEMA, although it "incorrectly" raised the issue that municipalities need not concern themselves with environmental considerations when considering a rezoning application; ss 2(1)(c) and (e) of NEMA; Glazewski Environmental Law 138. The principles of NEMA serve as a general framework in which environmental management and implementation plans must be formulated. Also see Kotzé "Regulation of Environmental Pollution" 263.

143 Section 2(4)(c) of NEMA. Municipalities must consider the principle that "environmental justice" must be pursued so that "adverse environmental impacts are not distributed in a manner that discriminates against" certain sectors of the community.

144 Section 2(4)(a)(viii) of NEMA states that the negative impacts on the environment and on people's environmental rights must be anticipated and prevented, and where they cannot altogether be prevented, must be minimised and remedied. The notion that the urban edge must be carefully considered ties in with this NEMA principle.

Likewise, it is also crucial that the principles of NEMA be considered when making decisions relating to the urban edge.142 This would ensure, amongst other things, that adverse environmental impacts are not targeted at poorer sectors of the community.143 In terms of the precautionary and preventative principles in NEMA, care must be taken to avoid costly errors, as it is more beneficial to prevent environmental harm than to remedy damage.144

A municipality must also consider the urban edge holistically so that its demarcation is neither too restrictive nor too permissive.145 If it is too restrictive, this will prevent necessary development and if it is too permissive, this will encourage sprawl.146 Municipalities’ environmental implementation and management plans, environmental management frameworks (EMFs)147 and strategic environmental frameworks (SEAs),148 although they are legally mandated through NEMA149 and not SPLUMA, need to be taken into account by municipalities when they take decisions relating to the urban edge.150 They are effective, environmentally-focussed spatial development tools that help municipalities make informed and sustainable planning decisions as they identify areas where specified activities should not take place.151 The EMF and SDF must be required to indicate the urban edge as demarcated by the municipality, and the demarcation must be the same in both documents to avoid conflict.152 It is proposed that the urban edge should exclude sensitive areas and that they should be located outside the urban edge to ensure additional protection for such areas.

145 According to Cilliers and Schoeman 2008 WIT Trans Ecol Environ 93, the urban edge should be approached holistically before delineating it. Also see Sinclair-Smith 2014 Urban Forum 313.

146 Sinclair-Smith 2014 Urban Forum 313.

147 GN 805 in GG 35769 of 10 October 2012. An EMF, although referred to as a spatial tool, may in fact be described as an environmentally focussed spatial development tool used to make "informed decisions regarding the management of impacts on the environment" that arise because of "human activity and development". It is defined in the Environmental Management Framework Guideline for Implementation (GN 806 in GG 35796 of 10 October 2021) as the "study of biophysical and socio-cultural systems of a geographic area to reveal where specific land-uses may best be practiced and to offer performance standard for maintaining appropriate use of such land".

148 The SEA shows areas with environmental sensitivities that need to be protected; Retief and Cilliers "Land-use Management and Planning" 577. SEA in its simplest form is defined as the environmental assessment of strategic decisions at policy, planning and programme levels of decision-making; SEA is promoted by planning legislation in terms of the White Paper on Environmental Management and Policy (1997).

149 As such they are prepared by provincial and national authorities and not municipalities.

150 Retief and Cilliers "Land-use Management and Planning" 579. In essence an EMF indicates the extent of the environmental authorisation requirements in defined geographic areas; Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism and CSIR Strategic Environmental Assessment in South Africa.

151 GN 805 in GG 35769 of 10 October 2012

152 Govindjee Addressing the Conflict Between Property Development and the Environment 286-291.

It is recommended that areas for development should be inside the urban edge so that the development potential there is maximised.153 Section 24 of the Constitution and the balancing of economic, social and environmental norms154 are important when demarcating, implementing and managing the urban edge. Other planning and environmental plans and policies that promote sustainable development and public participation are also important as they are in accordance with international norms.155

153 Section 59(3)(b)(v) of SPLUMA provides that cities and towns must be developed such that "the phenomenon of urban sprawl is discouraged and the development of more compact towns and cities with denser habitation is promoted". Cilliers and Schoeman 2008 WIT Trans Ecol Environ 85; Horn Life and Death of Urban Growth Management 2; Pekelharing Phenomenon of the Urban Edge 124; City of Cape Town Development Edges Policy of 2011 as cited in Horn 2018 Plan Perspect 12.

154 Du Plessis and Du Plessis "Striking the Sustainability Balance" 430.

155 Du Plessis 2017 LDD 240. An example is the Sustainable Development Goals and in particular SDG 11, that is dedicated to cities with the objective of making them "inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable."

156 In Western Cape Provincial Urban Edge Guideline the urban edge is seen as a transition between rural and urban land uses. This is a concept that is also included in the Cape Metropolitan Council Metropolitan Spatial Development Framework 37. This SDF combines urban edge lines and transition zones in its approach to urban edge protection, farm uses, social and demographic characteristics.

157 The IDP, a five-year plan, focusses on linkages (not separateness) and it can help guide and reframe how development occurs in rural and urban areas.

158 Draft NSDF 94. Historically, during apartheid it was impossible to develop strategies to integrate rural and urban development, as rural spaces functioned for government as labour reserves only and had very little other use; Horn Analysis of an Urban Edge 6-7.

159 Draft NSDF 95; NPC National Development Plan 2030 s 3.1.5.2. This is a departure from the previous situation where rural and urban spaces were viewed as being different to each other. Urban-rural linkages highlight the need for strategies that consider the needs and interests of both rural and urban places. Some rural areas have experienced "significant economic growth" near large city markets or along "transportation corridors". There is potential if policy shifts are implemented, and these successes are built on. The starting point is recognition of the extreme differentiation of different typologies that have developed in rural South Africa and that need different planning responses in relation to the varying settlement types.

160 Draft NSDF 94-95.

A transition zone156 is referred to in the writer's definition of an urban edge to imply an area that is less rigid and does not separate the rural from the urban.157 Under the previous regime, urban and rural areas were regarded as totally separate.158 The term "transition zone" is indicative of the integration and linkages that must be promoted between these areas.159 The importance of urban-rural linkages near the urban edge is referred to in the draft NSDF.160 It calls for the protection of rural areas and stresses the importance of agriculture and urban-rural linkages. Urban-rural linkages are useful as they create jobs and opportunities for people from rural areas; provide agricultural products to cities, help with poverty reduction for both

sectors, have the capacity to create national markets and trade networks, and promote tourism.161 They are also used to address inequality and environmental challenges on the periphery of cities.162 While the economic and social benefits are often acknowledged, the environmental benefits of urban-rural linkages are now being recognised. They help reduce sprawl, protect the environment, prevent degradation and are an ideal way to complement the role played by the urban edge. In this way they enhance and improve the effectiveness of the urban edge. Linkages must not be promoted in areas of critical biodiversity or sensitive areas163 as identified by the National Environmental Management: Biodiversity Act,164 the National Environmental Management: Protected Areas Act165 and even the National Environmental Management: Integrated Coastal Management Act.166 To be effective, proper infrastructure, roads and transport must be made available and infrastructure in terms of the Infrastructure Development Act must be used to facilitate the linkages between the urban and rural areas. The draft NSDF refers to regional-rural models that must be identified in the IDP and SDF of a municipality.167 Linkages play an

161 Ndabeni 2015 http://www.cogta.gov.za/cgta_2016/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/ ANALYSIS-OF-RURAL-URBAN-LINKAGES-AND-THEIR-IMPLICATIONS.pdf 40-49. Urban areas are in fact interlinked to the rural sector for issues such as the supply of raw materials, the affordable supply of food, and migration, whilst rural areas look to the urban areas for markets, non-agricultural jobs, and the use of urban universities and hospitals, for example.

162 Section 3.1.3 of the NDP refers to the protection of biodiversity and ecosystem services.

163 The reason is that the urban edge in a municipal SDF is recognised as a solution for the protection of biodiversity and ecosystem services. It does this by diverting growth pressures away from critical biodiversity areas to ensure that these areas are protected.

164 The National Environmental Management: Biodiversity Act 10 of 2004 sets out the mechanisms for managing and conserving biodiversity.

165 The National Environmental Management: Protected Areas Act 57 of 2003 provides for the protection and conservation of ecologically viable areas representative of South Africa's biological diversity by the establishment of a national register of all national protected areas so that those areas may be managed in accordance with national norms and standards for intergovernmental cooperation and public consultation.

166 The National Environmental Management: Integrated Coastal Management Act 24 of 2008 acknowledges in its Preamble that the coastal zone is a unique space that requires a dedicated and integrated management approach; Parramon-Gurney "Marine and Coastal Management" 781-782. Local government has an important role to play and is at the forefront of the sustainable management and development of the coastal zone, which is a critical and challenging position. However, it is national government that has been delegated the most power and oversees the seashore, the area between the low- and high-water marks. This is sometimes delegated to provincial or local government.

167 Draft NSDF 94-95.

important role and must be considered in municipal or regional SDFs to enable them to reach their full potential.168

168 Ndabeni 2015 http://www.cogta.gov.za/cgta_2016/wp-content/uploads/2016/05 /ANALYSIS-OF-RURAL-URBAN-LINKAGES-AND-THEIR-IMPLICATIONS.pdf 49. Appropriate infrastructure is critically important as a catalyst to enhance and improve these linkages as they are usually located on the periphery of large cities near a rural area.

169 The Clairisons case para 12.

8 Conclusion

The urban edge plays a vital role in eliminating sprawl and must be implemented and managed correctly to be effective. There is an urgent need to resolve the problem of sprawling developments near the periphery of cities in South Africa and it is important that the implementation and management of the urban edge by local government is carefully considered against the background of the definition proposed above. This article has considered the urban edge against the background of the historical legacies of apartheid. It was found that the concept of an urban edge led to different meanings and interpretations. In the Clairison's case169 the court referred to the urban edge as a "planning tool that serves as a guide in restricting the outward growth of urban settlements". Municipalities are the implementers of the urban edge. Although defined in documents and referred to in legislation there is still confusion. This article has proposed a broader definition of the urban edge that could be included in the SPLUMA and policy documents. This definition could assist municipalities make decisions regarding the urban edge or development that may occur in transitional areas. The article therefore also proposes factors that could be used in decision-making.

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GN R982 in GG 38282 of 4 December 2014 (Environmental Impact Assessment Regulations)

Green Paper on Development Planning (1999)

White Paper on Environmental Management and Policy (1997)

White Paper on Local Government (1998)

Internet sources

Department of Rural Development and Land Reform 2019 https://static.pmg.org.za/200120Draft_NSDF.pdf

Republic of South Africa Department of Rural Development and Land Reform 2019 Draft National Spatial Development Framework https://static.pmg.org.za/200120Draft_NSDF.pdf accessed 1 February 2022

eThekwini Municipality 2009 http://www.durban.gov.za/Documents/City_

Government/Development_Planning_Management/Draft%20Central%20Spatial%20Development%20Plan.%20June%202009.pdf

eThekwini Municipality 2009 Draft Central Spatial Development Plan http://www.durban.gov.za/Documents/City_Government/Development_Planning_Management/Draft%20Central%20Spatial%20Development%20Plan.%20June%202009.pdf accessed 20 November 2020

Knysna Municipality 2017 https://vdocuments.mx/document/draft-knysna-spatial-development-framework-figure-16-knysna-spatial-vision.html

Knysna Municipality 2017 Draft Knysna Spatial Development Framework Strategic Synthesis https://vdocuments.mx/document/draft-knysna-spatial-development-framework-figure-16-knysna-spatial-vision.html accessed 5 December 2020

Ndabeni 2015 http://www.cogta.gov.za/cgta_2016/wp-content/uploads/

2016/05/ANALYSIS-OF-RURAL-URBAN-LINKAGES-AND-THEIR-IMPLICATIONS.pdf

Ndabeni L 2015 An Analysis of Rural-urban Linkages and their Implications for Policies that Sustain Development in a Space Continuum http://www.cogta.gov.za/cgta_2016/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/ANALYSIS-OF-RURAL-URBAN-LINKAGES-AND-THEIR-IMPLICATIONS.pdf accessed 17 August 2020

UN Date unknown http://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/sustainable-development-goals/

United Nations Date unknown Sustainable Development Goals http://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/sustainable-development-goals/ accessed 20 July 2017

UN 2016 https://habitat3.org/the-new-urban-agenda/

United Nations 2016 The New Urban Agenda (Habitat III) https://habitat3.org/the-new-urban-agenda/ accessed 23 October 2017

UN 2019 https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/content/ documents/24797GSDR_report_2019.pdf

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UN-Habitat 2019 https://unhabitat.org/sites/default/files/documents/2019-06/effectiveness_of_planning_law_in_sub_sahara_bookweb-un_habitat.pdf

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List of Abbreviations

CSIR

Council for Scientific and Industrial

DFA

Development Facilitation Act 67 of 1995

EIA

Environmental Impact Assessment

EMF

Environmental management framework

Eur Spat Res Policy

European Spatial Research and Policy

IDP

Integrated Development Plan

IJHSS

International Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences

IUDF

Integrated Urban Development Framework

JPER

Journal of Planning Education and Research

LDD

Law, Democracy and Development

MSA

Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000

NDP

National Development Plan

NEMA

National Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998

NPC

National Planning Commission

NSDF

National Spatial Development Framework

PELJ

Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal

Plan Perspect

Planning Perspectives

RDP

Reconstruction and Development Programme

SAJELP

South African Journal of Environmental Law and Policy

SDF

Spatial Development Framework

SEA

Strategic environmental framework

SPLUMA

Spatial Planning and Land Use Management Act 16 of 2013

Stell LR

Stellenbosch Law Review

Town Plan Rev

Town Planning Review

Town Reg Plan

Town and Regional Planning

UN

United Nations

Urban Aff Rev

Urban Affairs Review

WIT Trans Ecol Environ

WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment