Social infrastructure sits at the heart of inclusive development, yet unlike economic infrastructure, these projects almost always require direct government support and a clear underpin from the Ministry of Finance. Budget allocations for social infrastructure PPPs often take second place to departmental budgets, where works and services are traditionally delivered in-house. Despite these constraints, a number of African countries have demonstrated that the PPP model can successfully deliver the infrastructure essential to societal wellbeing—including schools, hospitals, universities, housing, and other community-focused assets.
Infra Law has been involved in this evolution. With decades of experience advising on social infrastructure across South Africa and the broader region, we understand the policy, fiscal, regulatory, and procurement dynamics that shape these projects. We guide clients through the full lifecycle—from early-stage feasibility and affordability assessments to procurement, contracting, delivery, and long-term performance management.
We help public and private sector clients structure social infrastructure projects that are financially sustainable, operationally robust, and aligned with the public service mandates they are designed to support. Whether advising on a new schools PPP, a regional hospital programme, student accommodation, or municipal housing initiatives, Infra Law brings the insight and experience needed to navigate this complex but vital sector.
We have extensive experience in the following subsectors falling under the social infrastructure sector:
Infra Law has been at the forefront of government accommodation and precinct-development PPPs across Southern Africa for more than two decades. Our work spans the full lifecycle of these projects—from early feasibility and procurement, to construction, operations, and end-of-term handback. This depth of experience gives us a unique understanding of how government accommodation PPPs evolve over time, and how to structure them to meet the long-term needs of public institutions.
Our experience includes advising on some of the most significant government precincts and office accommodation projects in the region.
Across all these mandates, Infra Law brings an understanding of the policy, fiscal, and operational considerations that shape government accommodation projects. Our experience enables us to guide clients—public and private—through the complexities of delivering secure, efficient, and future-ready facilities that support the essential work of government.
Hospital PPPs sit at the intersection of clinical complexity, operational precision, and long-term public service delivery. Infra Law has been involved in shaping South Africa’s academic hospital PPP landscape—one of the most sophisticated segments of the health infrastructure market. These projects demand not only legal and commercial expertise, but also a nuanced understanding of how clinical services, specialist equipment, and hospital operations must align to deliver world-class care.
Academic hospitals, in particular, require careful integration of teaching, research, and tertiary clinical services. Our experience includes advising on co-location hospital PPPs, where public and private sectors share hospital facilities, equipment, and clinical spaces. These models require finely balanced contractual arrangements to ensure that both public service obligations and private sector efficiencies are met without compromising patient care or academic functions.
A defining feature of hospital PPPs is the central role of medical equipment. Unlike other infrastructure classes, equipment procurement must be tailored to the clinical specialisations offered by the hospital—from diagnostic imaging and surgical theatres to laboratory systems and high-care units. We help clients navigate these requirements, ensuring that equipment specifications, lifecycle planning, and technology refresh obligations are embedded into the project structure from the outset.
In private hospital environments, the business case extends beyond patient revenue. A significant portion of income is generated through rental arrangements with medical specialists who lease consulting rooms and access hospital facilities. We understand how these revenue streams interact with the broader financial model, and we support clients in structuring projects that reflect the realities of clinical practice and private healthcare economics.
Infra Law’s experience in the hospital sector is extensive and includes some of the most important health PPPs in South Africa:
Across these mandates, Infra Law brings an understanding of the clinical, financial, regulatory, and operational dimensions that define hospital PPPs. We guide clients through every stage of the project lifecycle—ensuring that health infrastructure is not only provided but delivered in a way that supports long-term clinical excellence and sustainable public health outcomes.
Education infrastructure is one of the most powerful levers for social and economic transformation, yet it is also one of the most financially intricate sectors in which to structure PPPs. Schools and universities operate within distinct funding ecosystems, and any long-term partnership with the private sector must be grounded in a clear understanding of how these institutions are financed, how they generate revenue, and how learners and students interact with the services provided. Infra Law brings sector insight to these dynamics, enabling us to guide clients through the full lifecycle of education PPPs with clarity and precision.
School PPPs are shaped by the fiscal realities of education departments. Because schools fall under provincial competence, a PPP model is only commercially viable if it is underpinned by a per-learner subsidy provided by the provincial treasury. While legislation often allows parents to contribute to school facilities and running costs through governing bodies, these contributions vary widely depending on the socio-economic context of the community. This variability must be carefully factored into the financial model, risk allocation, and long-term affordability of any school PPP.
Infra Law has advised on some of the most ambitious school infrastructure programmes in the region. These include:
This work demonstrates our ability to support governments in designing scalable, system-wide education infrastructure solutions.
Universities face a different set of pressures. Although they receive tuition allocations from government, these funds rarely cover the full accommodation needs of their student bodies. As a result, student housing has become one of the most compelling areas for PPP intervention—provided that students are able to direct their accommodation fees to the operator, with the university underwriting the arrangement. This model requires a sophisticated understanding of student demand, fee flows, occupancy risk, and the operational realities of running large-scale accommodation facilities.
Infra Law is deeply involved in reshaping this landscape. we were appointed by the Development Bank of Southern Africa to support the rollout of the Student Housing Infrastructure Programme —one of the largest coordinated student accommodation initiatives on the continent.
Our work included developing procurement documents (tender and model agreements) for four different procurement models and supporting the procurement of student accommodation projects for 12 universities and training colleges. SHIP is redefining how student housing is delivered in South Africa, and Infra Law is central to its legal and commercial architecture.
Education PPPs—whether for schools or universities—require more than legal drafting. They demand an understanding of the economics of education, the behaviour of learners and students, the funding flows that sustain institutions, and the operational realities of delivering teaching, learning, and accommodation services.
Infra Law brings this insight to every project. Our experience across both schools and universities enables us to guide clients through feasibility, structuring, procurement, contracting, and long-term performance management—ensuring that education infrastructure is delivered in a way that is financially sustainable, operationally robust, and aligned with public service mandates.
Housing is one of the most highly regulated and socially significant sectors in South Africa. It sits at the intersection of constitutional rights, public finance, land use, and long-term community development. Infra Law has experience navigating this landscape, advising on affordable housing, social housing, and blended-finance models that enable government and developers to deliver sustainable, inclusive human settlements.
Affordable housing is designed for households that meet a defined means test, ensuring that support is directed to those who cannot access housing through the open market. Because these households cannot carry the full cost of development, government plays a central role in making projects viable. Typically, government will make land available for development to reduce the overall cost per unit, and provide a subsidy to the developer, who then recovers the balance of the cost when the unit is sold to an eligible purchaser.
This model requires a precise understanding of subsidy frameworks, land-release mechanisms, and the financial structuring needed to ensure that developers can deliver units at scale while maintaining affordability for purchasers. Infra Law has advised on these mechanisms, helping clients structure projects that align with regulatory requirements and market realities.
Social housing operates under a distinct legislative framework and is aimed at providing rental accommodation to low-income households who are least able to afford housing. Developers in this space—known as Social Housing Institutions (SHIs)—must be accredited by the Social Housing Regulatory Authority (SHRA) before they can access government grant funding. The funding model is heavily state-supported; Government provides approximately 70% of the capital cost through grants and the SHI must raise the remaining 30% through debt or equity. This structure requires SHIs to demonstrate strong governance, financial sustainability, and compliance with SHRA’s accreditation criteria. Infra Law understands these requirements and supports clients in structuring projects that meet regulatory standards while remaining financially viable.
Infra Law’s credentials in the housing sector span national programmes, blended-finance platforms, intergovernmental arrangements, and PPP-based housing initiatives. Our experience includes:
Across these mandates, Infra Law has helped shape the legal and financial frameworks that underpin affordable and social housing delivery in South Africa. Our work supports government, financiers, and developers in creating housing solutions that are economically viable, socially inclusive, and aligned with long-term urban development
Prison PPPs are among the most complex and tightly regulated forms of social infrastructure. Unlike other accommodation-based PPPs, correctional facilities are structured around a cost-per-prisoner model, where the specification of the facility and the standard of services directly influence the overall cost. Higher-security environments, specialised rehabilitation programmes, and enhanced inmate care standards all increase the cost per prisoner, making careful structuring essential.
South Africa’s obligations under international treaties, conventions, and its own Constitution impose a minimum standard of prisoner care that the state must uphold. These standards shape everything from accommodation and nutrition to healthcare, rehabilitation, and safety. Any PPP model must therefore embed these obligations into the service specifications, performance regimes, and monitoring frameworks.
Security is another defining feature of prison PPPs. Operators must comply with strict security protocols, controlled-access systems, and clearly defined service levels that leave no room for ambiguity. These requirements limit the ability to generate third party revenue streams—unlike other PPP sectors where facilities can be shared or commercialised. In correctional services, third party access is necessarily restricted, which means the financial model must rely almost entirely on government payments rather than ancillary income.
Infra Law understands these dynamics and has advised both public and private sector clients on the legal, commercial, and operational considerations that underpin successful prison PPPs. Our experience spans project development, lender advisory, and bid support on maximum security facilities in South Africa.
Our credentials include:
Throughout these mandates, Infra Law brings an understanding of the constitutional, regulatory, financial, and operational frameworks that govern correctional services PPPs. We help clients navigate the unique constraints of this sector—ensuring that projects are structured to meet security imperatives, uphold human rights obligations, and deliver long-term value to the state.
Defence infrastructure projects occupy a unique space within the broader accommodation PPP landscape. While they share many structural features with conventional government accommodation projects, they differ in one critical respect: they require full government balance sheet support. Defence facilities cannot rely on third party revenue streams in the way that other public buildings sometimes can. For reasons of national security, access to defence sites must be tightly controlled, which limits the ability to generate supplementary income from external users.
The one notable exception is defence training facilities, where the private sector may offer similar training services and can rent space within the facility. Even then, access is carefully managed, and revenue generation opportunities remain constrained. These realities mean that defence PPPs must be structured with a clear understanding of the fiscal commitments required from the state, the operational sensitivities of defence environments, and the long-term asset management needs of military institutions.
Infra Law has experience advising on defence PPPs across South Africa, supporting the Department of Defence in designing, procuring, and managing projects that balance operational readiness with financial sustainability. Our work spans training facilities, headquarters accommodation, naval infrastructure, and military health services—each requiring a nuanced approach to risk allocation, security protocols, and lifecycle planning.
Our credentials include serving as the legal transaction advisor to the South African Department of Defence on four major PPP feasibility studies:
Across these mandates, Infra Law brings an understanding of the defence sector’s operational constraints, security requirements, and long-term infrastructure needs. Our experience enables us to guide clients through the full lifecycle of defence PPPs—from feasibility and structuring to procurement, contracting, and oversight—ensuring that projects are delivered in a way that supports national security objectives while maintaining commercial and operational integrity.