About Durbanville
Durbanville Property Market Guide
In-depth market analysis, rental rates, and investment insights
Industrial stock in Durbanville ranges from the established Durbanville Industrial Park, which offers mid-size units suited to light manufacturing and distribution, to the modern Atlantic Hills Business Park near the N7, which represents the area's most contemporary A-grade offering. Sectional-title warehouse units are available alongside larger single-tenanted facilities, and cold storage operators will find purpose-built options that serve the agricultural and food-processing sectors active in the surrounding wine country. Clear-to-eaves heights typically range from 8 to 12 metres across the better-quality stock, with three-phase power, dock-levellers and secure dedicated yards standard on newer developments at Atlantic Hills. Older Durbanville Industrial Park units tend toward smaller footprints with yard access adequate for rigid vehicles rather than full articulated combinations.
Industrial rentals in Durbanville currently range from approximately R55 to R95 per square metre per month, depending on specification, age and precise location within the node. Atlantic Hills commands the upper end of that band given its modern A-grade finishes and direct N7 exposure, while older stock in the Durbanville Industrial Park trades closer to the mid-range. This positions Durbanville slightly above comparable space in Brackenfell and Kraaifontein, which typically range from R50 to R80 per square metre, and comfortably below Montague Gardens where premium centrally-located warehousing can reach R110 per square metre and above. Stikland and Parow Industrial represent more affordable alternatives for tenants with flexibility on the N7 corridor, but Durbanville's Atlantic Hills development narrows the gap through the quality of its offering.
The Atlantic Hills Business Park benefits from direct proximity to the N7 distribution corridor, giving tenants efficient access to the West Coast ports, the Swartland agricultural belt and the broader Boland wine and fruit-producing regions. Durbanville's surrounding environment is notably affluent, anchored by residential suburbs of high income density and complemented by lifestyle amenities including the Cobble Walk Lifestyle Centre and a cluster of celebrated wine farms such as Diemersdal, De Grendel and Meerendal. This residential and lifestyle context does more than attract white-collar tenants, it supports a reliable and skilled local labour pool for light industrial operations and creates genuine foot-traffic demand for trade-counter and showroom components within warehouse developments. The overall aesthetic of Atlantic Hills reflects this premium suburban setting, with landscaped precincts and modern façades that would be unremarkable in Tyger Valley but stand apart from traditional Cape industrial parks.
The tenant mix that gravitates toward Durbanville industrial space is led by distribution and third-party logistics operators who serve the West Coast fishing and agricultural supply chains as well as Northern Suburbs residential retail. Cold storage users connected to the wine, fresh-produce and dairy sectors are a consistent presence, as are light manufacturers supplying building materials, agricultural inputs and consumer goods to the Boland interior. Durbanville competes directly with Brackenfell and Kraaifontein for cost-sensitive tenants, both of which offer lower base rentals on older stock, and with Montague Gardens for businesses that prioritise central Cape Town access over dual-highway coverage. Where Durbanville wins is on the combination of N1 and N7 access, the quality uplift at Atlantic Hills, and the ability to recruit from an affluent suburban residential base, making it the natural choice for distribution-led businesses anchoring the West Coast and Boland corridor.