Corporate News
By OKUTTAH MARK
In Summary
- Scangroup’s subsidiary Hill and Knowlton is part of a consortium that has secured a Sh2.1 billion contract to oversee construction of Konza Techno City.
- The Business Daily could not establish how much the Hill and Knowlton contract is worth.
Five local firms, among them Scangroup’s
subsidiary Hill and Knowlton, are part of a consortium that has secured
a Sh2.1 billion contract to oversee construction of Konza Techno City.
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The consortium, comprising of 11 firms led by US contractor
Tetra Tech, Monday signed a four-year contract with the government and
is expected to lay infrastructure such as power, roads and sewerage on
the 400 acres reserved for the city in addition to negotiating lease
agreements.
The other local firms included in the consortium
are Scion Real Estate, Kounkuey Designs Initiatives, HP-Gauff
Ingenieure, and Strategia Advisors represented by Ms Christine Ng’ang’a.
The local firms will join other six firms drawn from the US, Germany, the Netherlands and the UAE.
“We have five Kenyan firms that are part of the
consortium, with Scangroup’s Hill and Knowlton being in charge of the
Konza project communications,” said the Konza Technopolis Development
Authority KoTDA.
The Business Daily could not establish how much the Hill and Knowlton contract is worth.
The KoTDA chairman John Ngumi, however, said the
Sh2.1 billion total payment for the 11 consultants will be staggered
over four years.
HP-Gauff, which will provide engineering expertise,
has operations in more than 20 African countries with permanent branch
offices in Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, and Ethiopia.
Scion Real Estate is an investment firm focused
on urban development in Africa and was founded by Laila Macharia in
2006. The firm also provides investment solutions for institutional
investors and multinationals expanding into and within Africa.
In 2013, the company was appointed fund manager for
the Africa Metro Property Fund. The open-ended Africa Metro Property
Fund provides risk capital and bridging finance to builders in Africa’s
urban areas.
“We have remained consistent in our commitment to
deliver on this project which the President is very particular about, we
the ICT ministry commend Tetra Tech for their patience, energy and
commitment and assure them support as they come on board,” said ICT
secretary Fred Matiang’i during the contract signing.
Tetra Tech is expected to identify and structure financing options for the techno city.
Mr Ngumi said phase one is expected to attract at least 7,500 knowledge workers and 16,700 other workers.
“The benefits of building this city far outweigh
the inherent risks and perceived challenges. Many of these (jobs) will
target at youth who are the main drivers of the knowledge and digital
economy,” said Mr Ngumi.
Konza technopolis will from this month start laying
road and electricity networks after receiving an additional Sh400
million from Parliament, pushing its total allocation to Sh900 million.
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