Unisa Airport Acquisition: Africa's Largest University Pioneers Aviation Ownership

Transforming Higher Education Through Hands-On Aviation Training in South Africa

  • higher-education-news
  • higher-education-south-africa
  • skills-development
  • unisa
  • drone-technology

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

red and white helicopter flying over city during daytime
Photo by Jacques Nel on Unsplash

Promote Your Research… Share it Worldwide

Have a story or written a research paper? Become a contributor and publish your work on AcademicJobs.com.

Submit your Research - Make it Global News

Unisa's Bold Leap into Practical Aviation Education

The University of South Africa (Unisa), renowned as Africa's largest open distance learning institution, has achieved a groundbreaking milestone by acquiring a 20-hectare airport facility. This move positions Unisa as the first university on the continent to own and operate an airport, signaling a transformative shift toward hands-on technical training in higher education. 55 59 Announced by Principal and Vice-Chancellor Professor Puleng LenkaBula during a media briefing on March 19, 2026, the acquisition—effective from March 6—aims to bridge the persistent gap between theoretical knowledge and industry-ready skills in aviation and related fields.

With over 400,000 students enrolled across its programs, Unisa has long been a leader in accessible education since its founding in 1873. This acquisition underscores the university's strategic evolution from predominantly distance learning to incorporating practical, infrastructure-backed training, particularly in high-demand sectors like aviation. 59

Background: Unisa's Growing Focus on Aviation Studies

Unisa's journey into aviation education is rooted in its Catalytic Niche Area on Aviation and Aeronautical Studies, which supports South Africa's aviation economy encompassing 18 key airports including OR Tambo International. Programs already cover aviation mechanics, engineering, electronics, operations, safety policy aligned with international standards, and passenger experience management. 119 Initiatives like the Inhlanyelo Hub's Drone Divas Programme have trained women in drone piloting, coding, and industry optimization, graduating its first cohort in 2024 and highlighting Unisa's commitment to inclusive skills development. 91

The Aerotropolis Project, launched earlier in 2026, further complements this by exploring airport-led urban development models. It integrates land use, infrastructure, and economic activity around aviation hubs, fostering research in sustainable airport planning and alignment with the African Continental Free Trade Area. 56 This project hosted an inaugural symposium in October 2025, positioning Unisa as a thought leader in aviation-driven growth.

Unisa Aerotropolis Symposium participants discussing aviation development

Details of the Acquisition and Facility

The newly acquired 20-hectare site, located near Pretoria, will serve as a dedicated training and research hub. While the exact name of the former airfield remains undisclosed in official announcements, it offers ample space for runways, hangars, and simulation centers tailored for aeronautical engineering students. 58 Professor LenkaBula emphasized that the facility marks Unisa's entry into owning physical aviation infrastructure, enabling real-world application of studies.

Development plans include upgrading runways, constructing maintenance workshops, drone testing zones, and digital simulation labs. Official launch is slated for April-May 2026, with immediate integration into existing drone and aviation short learning programs. 57

Strategic Reasons: Tackling Theory-Practice Divide

South African higher education has long grappled with a disconnect between classroom theory and workplace demands, particularly in technical fields. Unisa's acquisition directly addresses this by providing students—many from underserved communities—with practical exposure to aircraft maintenance, flight operations, and drone piloting. Associate Professor Boitumelo Senokoane from the College of Human Sciences noted, “This 20-hectare airport will give our students a unique opportunity to apply their studies in practice and gain skills that are in high demand in the aviation and engineering industries.” 59

The initiative aligns with national priorities for skills development amid a projected aviation growth spurt. Africa's aviation sector anticipates fleet expansion and rising maintenance needs by 2036, exacerbating existing pilot and technician shortages. 99 Unisa aims to produce job-ready graduates competitive on global stages.

Upcoming Programs and Student Opportunities

Launching in 2026, enhanced programs will include diplomas and degrees in aeronautical engineering, aviation operations, drone technology, and space science integration. Students will engage in live flight simulations, aircraft disassembly, and regulatory compliance training per International Civil Aviation Organization standards.

For Unisa's distance learners, hybrid models will allow regional access via partnerships, while full-time cohorts utilize the facility. Priority for underrepresented groups, building on Drone Divas success, promises diverse talent pipelines. Graduates could fill roles at SAA, private carriers, or emerging drone firms, with employability boosted by certified practical hours. 58

Unisa students training on drones as part of aviation programs

Addressing South Africa's Aviation Skills Shortage

South Africa faces acute shortages in aviation professionals, with global trends luring local pilots abroad amid retirements and expansion demands. A 2025 summit highlighted strategies to attract youth, especially women, into the sector. 103 Unisa's airport positions it to train hundreds annually, supporting 43 Air School intakes and beyond.

In context, while Wits University offers Africa's only accredited undergraduate aeronautical engineering degree and UP excels in mechanical aeronautics, none own training airports. 129 130 Unisa's scale amplifies impact for distance learners nationwide. For deeper insights, see the Business Insider Africa analysis. 59

Implications for South African Higher Education

This acquisition challenges traditional models, inspiring other SA universities to invest in sector-specific infrastructure. Institutions like UCT and Stellenbosch lead aerospace research rankings, but practical facilities lag. 132 Unisa sets a precedent for public-private synergies, potentially influencing DHET enrolment planning 2026-2030. 86

It enhances Unisa's global profile, attracting international collaborations and funding for aviation R&D amid SA's R63 billion NSFAS disbursements and capacity crises elsewhere.

Stakeholder Perspectives and Reactions

Industry leaders praise the move for addressing MRO demands and fleet ageing. 99 Students on social media express excitement over accessible training. No major criticisms noted, though logistics for distance learners pose challenges.

VC LenkaBula envisions it as a “launchpad for future innovators,” aligning with Unisa's 150-year legacy. 55 Explore Unisa's niche at official page.

Future Outlook: Challenges and Opportunities

Upgrades require investment, but ROI via graduate placements is promising. Integration with Aerotropolis could spawn economic zones, boosting GDP contributions from aviation (currently vital for tourism/logistics).

Challenges include regulatory approvals and maintenance costs, yet partnerships with ACSA or private firms loom. By 2030, Unisa could lead African aviation HE, training thousands amid continental growth.

  • Short-term: 2026 program launches, facility operationalization.
  • Medium-term: Research hubs, international student influx.
  • Long-term: Aerotropolis model replication across SA unis.

Global Context and SA Comparisons

Globally, universities like Embry-Riddle (USA) own airports, but Africa's lag makes Unisa pioneering. In SA, no peers match this; Wits/UP focus theory-heavy degrees. Unisa's model democratizes access for rural students, vital given 500k+ annual rejections. 9812

For aviation careers, check SA university jobs.

Portrait of Prof. Evelyn Thorpe

Prof. Evelyn ThorpeView full profile

Contributing Writer

Promoting sustainability and environmental science in higher education news.

Discussion

Sort by:

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

New0 comments

Join the conversation!

Add your comments now!

Have your say

Engagement level

Frequently Asked Questions

✈️What is the Unisa airport acquisition?

Unisa acquired a 20-hectare airport near Pretoria on March 6, 2026, becoming Africa's first university to own one for aviation training.57

🎓Why did Unisa buy an airport?

To provide hands-on training in aviation, drones, and aeronautics, bridging theory-practice gap and addressing SA aviation skills shortage.

🚁What programs will use the airport?

Enhanced diplomas/degrees in aeronautical engineering, drone tech, aviation operations starting 2026, building on existing niche areas.

📊How many students at Unisa?

Over 400,000 enrolled, making it Africa's largest university, with focus on distance learners gaining practical access.

⚠️What is SA aviation skills gap?

Pilot/technician shortages due to global demand, retirements; Unisa aims to train hundreds annually amid growth projections.

💬Who announced the acquisition?

VC Puleng LenkaBula, calling it a 'launchpad for innovators'; Assoc Prof Senokoane highlighted industry skills.

🏗️Link to Aerotropolis Project?

Yes, complements research on airport-led development, sustainable planning, and economic zones.

🏫Other SA unis with aviation?

Wits, UP offer degrees but no owned airports; Unisa unique for scale and practicality.

📅Timeline for facility use?

Launch April-May 2026; immediate integration with drone programs.

🔮Future impacts on HE?

Inspires infrastructure investments, enhances employability, positions SA unis globally in aviation ed.

🎯Student benefits?

Job-ready skills, certifications, access for rural/distance learners via hybrids.