THE German World Cup base at the idyllic Velmore  Estate near the tiny suburb of Erasmia in South Africa has been transformed into  a builder's site just four months before Michael Ballack and his team head to  South Africa in search of global conquest.
 The five-star hotel complex which lies about 10  miles west of Pretoria, will be home to the German team and officials from the  end of May - but one crucial factor, a suitable training pitch, has only just  got underway.
 Management at Velmore, a popular venue for local  weddings, have been forced to dig up the grassy bank running down to the Hennops  River - bringing in diggers and ground-levelling equipment to build a  fenced-off, state-of-the-art surface for the German team.
 And that has left well-off locals, seeking the site  as a wedding venue, in a bit of a stew.
 A spokesman for Velmore said: "We researched local  grounds in the area for the Germans to train on but we couldn't find anything  suitable close by. We are at the perfect altitude for their team to prepare, we  just didn't have a pitch.
 "Now we've begun work on the surface, as you can  see. This hotel was only finished in November of last year and everything is  going into preparing for the arrival of the German team. We are teaching our  staff to speak the language where possible and must do everything we can to make  their stay here as comfortable as we can.
 "Unfortunately, the building of the pitch has meant  we have had to postpone weddings at our venue, which was just becoming popular  for top-of-the-range marriage celebrations.
 "But we are telling people we will be back to  normal as soon as possible. The pitch will be turfed with a mixture of rye grass  and local kikuyu, providing an instant surface. It will stay green even in the  winter when we get frost and no rain here.
 "The only difference for people getting married  here is that they will have a flat surface rather than a grassy bank sloping  down to the river. The goalposts will only be up for the duration of the  German's stay."
 Velmore is, as our pictures show, a remarkable  five-star complex built, essentially, in the middle of nowhere, backed by local  money and overseas funding from India - many such sites are mushrooming around  the Johannesburg and Pretoria areas in the build up the Africa's first World  Cup.
 Behind an imposing frontage, one  half of the hotel has already been shut down in preparation for Germany's  arrival. The wedding venue (see picture) sees couples march along an aisle  which stretches into the middle of the main swimming pool with guests  surrounding the poolside. The football pitch will be right in the line of sight  of the official making the union.
 Velmore also offers a brand new spa facility with  oxygen chambers and remarkable presidential suite complete with a room for a  bodyguard - but for the thousands of German fans expected to want to see the  team train, there is no obvious accomodation within ten miles of the  hotel.
 A nearby camp-site has been ear-marked for the  German fans but with temperatures plummeting below zero on the highveld - the  area is about 1500m above sea-level, the same as the average ski resort in  Austria - and concerns over security, it is likely the fans will have to pay  inflated costs for accomodation in Centurion 10 miles away or Sandton, about 20  miles distant.
 England's base in Rustenburg, a further 50 miles  away from both the major middle-class residential areas, raises similar concerns  as locals seek to profit from the month long football extravaganza.
 
 
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