Joburg's Pothole Patrol team fixes 330,000 potholes since 2021

A dedicated team from Discovery’s Pothole Patrol initiative repairs potholes daily in Johannesburg, having fixed over 330,000 since 2021 in partnership with the City of Joburg and Joburg Roads Agency. Supervisor Kgotso Pule says, “I feel like Superman, I save lives every day.” The effort addresses a problem where over 980 potholes are reported weekly.

Eight mobile Pothole Patrol teams operate daily from 9am to 3.30pm across Johannesburg, cleaning, sealing, and filling potholes reported via an app. Residents submit photos and details, inspectors verify, and teams respond. In one instance on Victoria Avenue in Melrose, a team tackled 40 potholes over 500m. Each team fills 15 to 20 potholes per day using European technology that heats existing tarmac for binding, achieving a 0.2% failure rate, according to CEO Tatum de Lange. She explains, “Tarmac is like skin, it dries out in the sun and rain, and it needs to be moisturised.” The process involves barricading the site, removing debris, applying sealant, heating, and adding new tar. Team members express passion for the work. Supervisor Kgotso Pule feels like Superman saving lives. Inspector Busisiwe Mbewe, with five years on the project, calls it her “little baby” and recounts staying late to fix an extra pothole on William Nicol to prevent accidents. Jan Makwela, also five years in, says, “Let’s burn,” while firing the heating machine, adding, “We are saving lives. People appreciate us.” Broader context from the Johannesburg Roads Agency (JRA) shows over 980 potholes reported weekly on its 13,599km network. From July to December last year, 23,572 were reported and 20,302 fixed, excluding Pothole Patrol efforts. Potholes form from water erosion under roads no larger than one square metre, costing R700 to R1,500 each to repair. JRA spokesperson Lucia Mhlanga cites ageing infrastructure, excavations, heavy traffic, overloading, and weather as causes. The agency conducts Visual Road Condition Index assessments every three years and has budgeted R149-million for potholes in 2025/26 out of R912.8-million for ageing roads.

مقالات ذات صلة

Brixton resident angrily confronts Johannesburg Mayor Dada Morero at a water tower amid prolonged outages.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Johannesburg resident confronts mayor over prolonged water outages

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

A frustrated Brixton resident in Johannesburg confronted Mayor Dada Morero at a water tower site, highlighting severe water shortages that have lasted weeks. The viral encounter underscored residents' desperation amid ongoing outages affecting daily life. Officials face criticism for poor crisis management as the issue impacts upcoming local elections.

Keyuren Maharaj, a final-year mechanical engineering student at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, has developed the CityMenderSA app to track infrastructure issues across South Africa. The tool allows residents to log problems like potholes and water leaks using their phones, providing a national map of service delivery failures and fixes. Since its launch seven months ago, it has recorded 2,700 faults nationwide.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Nelson Mandela Bay municipality is appointing additional plumbers to address a surge in water leak complaints, which rose from 4,000 in January to 6,770 in February. Dam levels supplying the area have dropped to 34.31%. Officials highlight a shortage of engineers as a key barrier to fixing the ageing infrastructure.

أوصت لجنة برلمانية بتأسيس دورية سلامة الطرق السريعة الوطنية، على غرار قوة حماية السكك الحديدية، لتعزيز الاستجابة للحوادث، وفرض القوانين المرورية، وحماية البنية التحتية في شبكة الطرق السريعة المتنامية في الهند. يأتي هذا المقترح في ظل بيانات تشير إلى وقوع 473 ألف حادث طريق و170 ألف حالة وفاة في عام 2024، حيث ارتبطت الطرق السريعة الوطنية بأكثر من 52,600 حالة وفاة. وقد تم تقديم التقرير إلى البرلمان في 25 مارس 2026.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Building on recent waste collection disruptions from protests and operational issues, Johannesburg's Pikitup is deploying teams this weekend to clear backlogs in multiple affected areas and restore normal services.

The second phase of essential water infrastructure maintenance in Johannesburg begins on December 19, raising concerns for residents still recovering from extended outages in the first phase. This work targets the Eikenhof system and could affect supplies in several southern areas until December 21. Experts warn that full recovery may take days, potentially impacting holiday plans.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Transmission pylons in Nelson Mandela Bay have collapsed again, leaving parts of the metro without power for up to three weeks. The city budgeted R11.9-million for repairs this financial year, short of the R35-million needed. Businesses report significant losses from the outages.

 

 

 

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