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2,200m² Training Facility For Sale in Tzaneen Industrial

R5,500,000

Web Ref No RNC111

Commercial Building in New Industrial Area

Big Office Building in the New Industrial Area

Ideal for Training Facility or Warehouse Space

Building Currently Provide The Following

- 8 Offices

- Open Plan reception + 1 Open Office

- 2 Conference Facilities

- Big Storeroom

- Archive

- Big Canteen with Fully Equipped Kitchen

- 10 Rooms with Communal Bathroom (Outside Building)

1800m² Yard (for future development)

- Covered Parking for 4 Vehicles

- 10 Open Uncovered Parking Spaces

- 3 Phase Electricity

Contact RealNet Tzaneen to Discuss This Opportunity of a Lifetime

Some Information About The Beautiful Town We Call our Home.

Tzaneen (/z?'ni?n/) is a Large Garden Town Situated in the Mopani District Municipality of the Limpopo province in South Africa.

It is situated in a high rainfall fertile region with tropical and subtropical agriculture taking place in a 20,000 square kilometers (7,700 sq mi) region. It is Limpopo's second largest town after Polokwane.

About 475,000 people reside within a 30 km (19 mi) radius, with the town itself holding a population of around 30,000.

Tzaneen is today a proud home of both the Tsonga and Bapedi.

Approximately 225,000 Bapedi Tribes of Balobedu ba ga Modjadji, BaNareng ba ga sekororo, Batlou ba ga makgoba, Bathlabine ba ga mogoboya, BaKgaga ba maake, Bakgaga ba maupa and Babirwa ba ga Raphahlelo, phooko and Bakoni ba mametja call Tzaneen their home.

Equally so, approximately 220,000 Tsonga tribes of Shiluvane-Nkuna tribe Hosi Muhlaba-Shiluvane (132,000 people/subjects) and Valoyi tribe under Hosi Nwamitwa-Valoyi (91,000 people/subjects) make the same claim that Tzaneen is also their native land, thereby making the Tsonga-Bapedi ratio at Tzaneen a 50:50 outcome.

Both the Tsonga nation and Bapedi Nation communities go beyond Tzaneen and are also found in large numbers in nearby towns of Bushbuckridge and Hazyview respectively, which are 191 km (119 mi) south-east of Tzaneen and they also live peacefully with one another in this part of the Lowveld.

The distance from Tzaneen to Johannesburg is approximately 420 km (260 mi).

Origin of the name.

Tzaneen's name is derived from a Sepedi word 'Tsaneng', which refers to a small basket called 'Tsana'. Tsana was made of bamboo grass called Lehlaka. Due to the fertile riverbank, the area was known to produce high-quality bamboo grass used to make different types of utensils. Tsana was a popular utensil made in the area. People came from different areas for the popular Tsana. Later the area would be known as DiTsaneng (a place where Tsanas are made). On the arrival of colonisers, the name changed to Tzaneen, which has since then been called.

Nonetheless, the name 'Tzaneen' adopted by the Afrikaner people, from the Tlou people under Makgoba, renamed the place back to 'Tsaneng', because today it is a place where Bapedi tribes and other people 'gather', thus fulfilling the name.

Weather.

Mostly sunshine, long summer days with pleasant winters. Tzaneen's subtropical conditions provide more suited weather for dense forests (high summer rainfall) than the thorny bushveld above the escarpment and further to the east.

The summer months, September – March, have an average temperature of 28 °C (82 °F) and winter months around 15 °C (59 °F). Rainfall averages from around 800 mm (31 in) per year in town to over 1,500 mm (59 in) per year in the mountains.

Tzaneen produces about 40% of South Africa's avocados, 40% of South Africa's mangoes and 20% of South Africa's bananas[citation needed]. Tzaneen also produces 90% of South Africa's tomatoes[citation needed] through the ZZ2, and other, farms making South Africa the world's 40th largest tomato producer. Even though South Africa is ranked 40th in terms of tomato production, the ZZ2 farms themselves are the world's biggest producer of tomatoes. Tzaneen is also the biggest producer of pine plantations in the Limpopo Province, accounting for more than 85% of Limpopo's pine and bluegum production[citation needed]. The majority of Tzaneen's tropical indigenous forest have been destroyed during the last 100-years in order to give way to pine, bluegum and other agricultural plantations.

The economy of Tzaneen depends largely on farming fruits, vegetables, animals and timber. Agriculture was the key development in the rise of Tzaneen, whereby farming of domesticated species created food surpluses that nurtured its development. Water boreholes are common in Tzaneen farms and households as a means to water crops and for household chores.[citation needed]

A wide range of fruit are grown in the Tzaneen area, notably mangoes, bananas, oranges, tomatoes and avocados. Pine and eucalyptus plantations are also a common sight in the area around the town, particularly toward Modjadjiskloof, Magoebaskloof and Haenertsburg. The plantations serve a number of sawmills located in the area.

Features

Zoning Commercial
Covered Parkings 4
Monthly Rates R1,800.00pm Excl. VAT
Floor Size 2,200m²
Land Size 4,078m²
Air Conditioning Yes
Extras

Air Conditioner
Alarm System
Air Conditioning Unit
Common Toilet
Recreation Room
Tiled Floors

Broker Contact Details

Francois du Toit
RealNet RainMaker

Cell 060 997 5235
Office (087) 6558000
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