
Just over a decade ago, Menlyn was a quiet residential suburb in Pretoria. Today, it's generating R1.51 billion annually and being called "Pretoria's Sandton." This is the incredible story of how R10+ billion in investment transformed 100 suburban houses into South Africa's most ambitious mixed-use development.In this deep dive, we explore the massive numbers behind Menlyn Maine: 315,000 square meters of development, over 12,000 jobs created, and construction so massive it required moving 50,000 truckloads of soil and using 7.5 million bricks. We break down Sun International's R4.2 billion Time Square complex, featuring the 8,500-seat SunBet Arena that's now one of the country's premier entertainment venues.But this isn't just about impressive statistics. Menlyn Maine represents a fundamental shift in South African urban planning – creating walkable "third spaces" where people can live, work, shop, and socialize without getting in their cars. Along with developments like Melrose Arch and the V&A Waterfront, it's pioneering a new model for lifestyle-oriented precincts in traditionally car-centric cities.From luxury apartments selling for R20.5 million to a casino generating R2.7 billion in government revenue over five years, we examine how this development became an economic powerhouse that's reshaping Pretoria's eastern suburbs. We also look at the employment impact – from 10,000 construction jobs to 2,200 permanent positions – and how Sun International's commitment to absorbing all 600 Morula Sun employees shows the human side of major development.This is the story of how vision, investment, and execution created not just a business district, but a blueprint for African urban development that's influencing cities across the continent.