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An African Villa, Cape Town, South Africa


Star rating: StarStarStarStar
Address: 19 Carstens Street, Tamboerskloof, Cape Town, South Africa, 8005

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Booking info

Arrival: Thu 9 Oct 2008
Departure: Fri 10 Oct 2008
No. adults: 2

Who stays here

The hotel was Annie Lennox's base when she visited Cape Town.

Come for

  • Small pool
  • Spacious, beatifully decorated rooms
  • Contemporary African style without pretension

Not suitable for

  • The claustrophobic; no real outdoor areas
  • Gourmands - you'll have to venture outside the hotel's wall for fine dining

Children

The hotel welcomes children over 12. They can provide an extra bed in the larger Superior rooms for families.

Eating in

On open kitchen and adjacent dining room offer buffet and cooked breakfasts (the fruit salad, studded with fresh pineapple, is a marvel). The two refectory-like tables are large and communal – a little demanding on the social skills for the time of day.

Press Quotes

"... a retreat that is distinctly African, with a touch of Zen. Every piece of furniture in the muted, individually decorated rooms was commissioned, and most of it is for sale—from the papier-mâché lampshade in the shape of a kudu head over the fireplace to the red Zulu hats mounted on the headboard. " Travel + Leisure 06

"A graceful Victorian mansion near Kloof street, converted into an 11-roomed guesthouse, that's brimming with eclectic African chic."


An African Villa by Brian Johnston


An African Villa should have been on a TV home renovation show, because its owners have turned three rundown student townhouses into a stylish and very attractive boutique hotel in quite an inventive way. We think the style should be termed Afro-Zen. Grass baskets from Malawi have become eye-catching wall decorations, war spears are turned into artworks, peasant vessels from Zambia seem chic, and painted ostrich eggs are piled in bowls and look like the latest in Cape Town cool. We're not quite sure how it's all been carried off so successfully, but if you want to know how to make a Zulu ceremonial wedding hat into a room feature, this is the place to be. And despite the contemporary style, An African Villa is very comfy, with peaceful earth tones highlighted with red walls, two lounges with scattered sofas, complimentary tea and coffee, and an honesty bar. Thumbs up to the two complimentary Internet stations – they even have thoughtful notepads and pencils set out beside them. A courtesy phone in the lobby also offers free local calls. The only disappointment, perhaps, is the rather bare courtyard with its tiny pool: this is really an indoors kind of place. British, German and American tourists love it. And why not? Even the location in a quiet Tamberskloof district street is good, just below Signal Hill and a 20-minute walk from the city centre.

The rooms
Created from three adjacent townhouses knocked together, An African Villa doesn't exactly have a room standard; all are different sizes and locations. (But okay, ask for room C4 if you want the biggest in the house, with a four-poster bed and large balcony overlooking the street.) In any case, all twelve rooms have king-size beds (with twin option), and are decorated in very soothing brown and white shades. Porcupine quills, ostrich eggs and apples make for interesting additional decorative touches: look and learn. If you're really picky, you might chose between green highlights or red highlights in your cushions. Suffice to say that all the guestrooms are dandy: good armchairs, good bedside tables, good desk. Yes, the TV screens are a bit small (in room C4 you'd need a telescope to see it from the bed), but what are you doing watching TV in glorious Cape Town anyway?


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