“…At this stage, the South African network fits with the model developed by E. J. Taaffe, R. L. Morrill & P. R. Gould (1963): penetrating lines appeared to serve different ambitions: establishing political and military connections, and producing agricultural goods for export. Hence, the railways network was developed according to what can be observed in other African colonies: the penetrating lines were connecting the main harbors to areas of agricultural production such as the wine lands or the breeding areas, especially to export ostrich feathers and sheep wool (Baffi, 2014). At the time, the networking of the colony combined with the influx of British and European immigrants, the economic dynamism of the settlers and the political and administrative organization contributed to structuring the space located at the tip of the continent, turning Cape Town into a proper bridgehead for Southern Africa.…”