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Korle Lagoon Smart City Project to kick off soon as committee meets; Mayor signals fast-tracked action

14 hours ago

Government plans to redevelop communities and waterfront areas around the Korle Lagoon are expected to move into an implementation phase soon under the Integrated Ga–Gbese Korle Smart City and Beach Development Project.

The implementation follows a committee meeting held  on Tuesday, February 3, chaired by the Member of Parliament (MP) for Ablekuma South Constituency and former Mayor of Accra, Hon. Alfred Okoe Vanderpuije and attended by the Mayor of Accra, Hon. Michael Kpakpo Allotey,  to align stakeholders around delivery steps, including financing coordination, technical planning and the social safeguards expected to accompany the redevelopment

The Smart City concept, to be delivered in specialised zones, includes a commercial business enclave, a financial and corporate district, recreational and marina spaces, sea defence and breakwater infrastructure, a community health corridor with hospital and polyclinic facilities, a community theatre, a high bridge across the lagoon, and affordable housing units.

The $17 billion public-private partnership project is expected to generate over 100,000 jobs for Ghanaian youth upon completion, with the first phase estimated at $700 million.

Mayor Allotey, speaking after the committee meeting, said the redevelopment would not be treated as a talk-focused engagement, adding that he intended to prioritise visible progress and practical action.

 He said he had communicated to the project champions that his participation would be driven by delivery, and that the committee’s engagement style would remain short and execution oriented.

On the anticipated social impact, the Mayor acknowledged that relocation would be required for people likely to be affected within project corridors and that resettlement planning would need to be treated as part of the implementation process.

He indicated that land at Adjen Kotoku could be considered for relocation arrangements while urging affected persons to cooperate with lawful processes when engagement teams and developers begin field activities.

The Mayor linked the project’s momentum to ongoing enforcement actions by the Accra Metropolitan Assembly in the city centre, explaining that the renewed decongestion exercise and the Red Line policy were intended to restore pedestrian movement, reopen pavements for public use and ensure that city by-laws were applied consistently.

Touching on the project’s direction, Hon. Okoe Vanderpuije expressed satisfaction with decongestion efforts across parts of Accra and said those actions would complement redevelopment and modernisation plans.

He said discussions were ongoing with financiers and technical leadership at the relevant ministry level to coordinate the steps required to realise the project,and that broader stakeholder support, including from local authorities and chiefs, would be critical to moving from planning to delivery.

For his part, Hon. Alfred Nii Kotey Ashie, MP for Odododiodio endorsed the redevelopment direction while emphasising the need for compensation planning and relocation options to reduce hardship.

He said the redevelopment of the beachfront and its surrounding environment had long been a priority of his,and that implementation would have to balance regeneration with safeguards that reduce inconvenience for affected residents.