When shoppers dropped blankets and tins of pet food into branded collection bins at Hyprop malls across Gauteng this winter, they were doing more than easing a shelter’s winter woes — they were answering a personal call to honour a colleague’s memory. The Hyprop Foundation’s Warm Woodrock campaign, run in memory of Nicole Greenstone, closed with R18,863.75 in product donations and R6,043.00 in monetary contributions — a combined total of more than R24,000 that will sustain Woodrock Animal Rescue’s lifesaving work.
“Our hearts are full,” said Leonie Prinsloo of the Hyprop Foundation. “This campaign was built on love for Nicole, for animals, and for community. Thanks to every person who gave, we’ve not only honoured Nicole’s memory but provided real, tangible support to animals that desperately need it.” Prinsloo’s remarks capture the campaign’s dual purpose: practical aid for a hand-to-mouth shelter and a public act of remembrance for a colleague described by organisers as deeply compassionate.
The numbers and the neighbourhood impact
Warm Woodrock ran across five Gauteng centres from July through August and mixed in-store activations (including live caricature sessions) with easy giving options — branded bins, QR-code links and on-site drop-offs. The fundraising tally by centre shows the breadth of participation:
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Woodlands Shopping Centre — total contributions valued at R6,106.90 (R3,968.90 in goods; R2,138.00 cash).
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The Glen Shopping Centre — R6,273.00 total (R2,368.00 in goods; R55.00 cash; R3,850.00 via QR donations).
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Clearwater Mall — R3,743.00 total (R3,393.00 goods; R350.00 cash).
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Rosebank Mall — R2,464.85 in goods.
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Hyde Park Corner — R6,669.00 in product donations.
Those site totals, alongside the campaign’s QR-code contributions, together produced the R18,863.75 in goods and R6,043.00 in cash that Hyprop announced.
Little gestures, big outcomes
The Warm Woodrock drive deliberately matched easy, everyday giving with warm engagement: shoppers who donated on select weekends received personalised caricatures of themselves with their pets, a small thank-you that helped create social moments and sustained footfall at donation points. That blend of light-hearted interaction and targeted philanthropy produced practical outcomes: more blankets for winter, steady bags of food for kennels, and funds that will pay for veterinary care and transport — items that are always in short supply for a shelter that receives no government funding.
“Nicole poured her heart into caring for those without a voice,” Prinsloo added. “Through Warm Woodrock, her legacy has reached far beyond the workplace. It has sparked a ripple of generosity and empathy across Hyprop’s malls.” The sentiment was echoed by Woodrock volunteers and managers, who emphasised how critical outside support is to keep the shelter’s operations running.
Why Woodrock matters — and why it relies on community support
Woodrock Animal Rescue is one of Gauteng’s oldest independent pro-life shelters. Established in the early 1990s, it cares for hundreds of animals at any one time and depends on donations, volunteers and sponsorships to pay for food, medicine and shelter upkeep. With no recurring government subsidy, campaigns such as Warm Woodrock do more than fill a storeroom — they underwrite the day-to-day survival of the rescue’s animals and the rehabilitation programmes that make rehoming possible. Woodrock
For Hyprop, the Warm Woodrock initiative fits within a broader CSI strategy administered by the Hyprop Foundation, which focuses on sustainable community projects across the company’s shopping-centre portfolio. The foundation — established to channel Hyprop’s corporate social investment — frequently links retail footfall to local causes, an approach leaders say both drives engagement and channels tangible support into neighbourhood priorities. hyprop.co.za
What the donation will do next
Hyprop confirmed that the collected goods and funds will be transferred to Woodrock to cover immediate needs: bedding, dry and wet food, and medical supplies. The QR-code donations — used by many shoppers who prefer cashless giving — are already reflected in the campaign’s totals and streamline the gift flow to the shelter. Woodrock’s team will also use funds for transport and outreach to source micro-donors and sponsors for long-term care.
A model worth repeating
Warm Woodrock demonstrates how corporate platforms and everyday consumers can work together to fill service gaps in the non-profit sector. The campaign’s compact timeline, visible donation points and simple incentives (caricatures, QR codes) made giving straightforward — and made compassion contagious. Prinsloo said Hyprop plans to continue working with partners such as Woodrock and to explore similar campaigns across its other centres.
How you can still help Woodrock
Those who missed the Warm Woodrock bins can still support Woodrock Animal Rescue through its website (which lists wishlist items, sponsorship options and banking details) or via Takealot’s donation link and community channels. For shoppers who want to replicate the campaign’s spirit: consider organising a micro-drive at your workplace, sponsoring a kennel, or donating through a vetted shelter wishlist to ensure goods match immediate needs.
































