45m² Office To Let in Stanger Central
R90 per m²
Web Ref No CL82
OFFICE SPACE TO LET IN THE CBD OF STANGER / KWADUKUZA, KZN
Ideally located commercial space situated in the CBD of Stanger providing high visibility. With the growth and expansion of KwaDukuza, prime office space has become highly sought after. The premises is ideal for a medical centre, law firm, corporate companies as well as businesses in the KwaDukuza and Ilemebe District.
The building allows for a plenitude of office space as well as a reception area, kitchen facilities and bathroom facilities. The large erf size provides on site parking. The building structure is well maintained and has recently been revamped.
KwaDukuza (also known as Stanger) is a town in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. In 2006, its official name was changed from Stanger to KwaDukuza however Zulu people in the area called it Dukuza well before this date, and many white South Africans continue to use Stanger today. Stanger has been used on new road signs in the area.
Stanger lies inland from Blythedale in the midst of sugarcane fields, its streets lined with Jacarandas, home to King Shakas memorial monument and part, not only of the Zulu Heritage Route, but the proposed Sugar Route as well.
KwaDukuza-Stanger beginnings were as a new capital for Shakas Zulu nation during what were to become the last years of his life. KwaDukuza - ironically meaning place of the lost person - was named after the intricate labyrinth layout of huts, and it was in one of the kraals that Shaka was assassinated by two of his half-brothers - Dingane, who was to succeed him, and Mhlangane. His body was buried upright in a grain pit - a hasty burial the day after his assassination - over which stands a simple stone memorial erected in his honour.
Shakas successor was to abandon kwaDukuza allowing it to run to wrack and ruin, and it was only in 1873 that a European town was built on the site, named after William Stanger, the surveyor-general of Natal. Today KwaDukuza-Stanger serves as the commercial, magisterial and communication centre for the large sugar-producing district.
Today KwaDukuza-Stanger is one of many of the towns in this area to claim an authentic eastern influence, brought here by the first Indian immigrants who came to work on the sugar cane fields. Markets, mosques and temples of their descendents now add a vibrant flavour the towns on the Dolphin Coast.
The weather here is typically tropical and humidity high, hence the sugarcane and bottlenose dolphins use the sea as their playground throughout the year. The Indian market in town is worth a visit.