Sightseeing OverviewThere is so much to do and see in Cape Town that the first-time visitor will find it difficult to fit everything in. Nevertheless, the city center itself is small and compact, and easy and pleasant to navigate on foot. Table Mountain watches over the proceedings, providing not only a beautiful backdrop but also a handy point of orientation, which makes getting lost quite difficult.
The Foreshore's V&A Waterfront is a stunning example of urban regeneration, where old-style harbor warehouses and buildings have been transformed into beautiful shopping centers,
luxury hotels and a multitude of restaurants.
Spreading west toward Signal Hill is the
Bo-Kaap (Top Cape) area, also known as the Malay Quarter (Malay is a misnomer for Cape Muslims of Asian descent). This area was home to the freed slaves - their descendants resisted all attempts at removal by the apartheid authorities. They were much more successful than the District Six (now Zonnebloem) inhabitants, whose homes were bulldozed, following then Prime Minister Verwoerd's enforcement of racial segregation laws.
Offshore, north of Table Bay, lies Robben Island, the prison where Nelson Mandela and many of the other top political activists of South Africa were gaoled by the apartheid regime.
The outlying areas of Cape Town are also of great interest to visitors and an organized ‘township tour', which explores the predominantly black areas of Kayalitsha
, Langa
and Gugulethu, is an increasingly popular item on the tourist agenda.
To the west of the city center and extending south toward Cape Point, the Atlantic Seaboard incorporates the upmarket Sea Point, Clifton, Camps Bay, Llandudno, Hout Bay, Noordhoek and Kommetjie seaside suburbs. Meanwhile, curling around the eastern side of the Table Mountain range is the Southern Suburbs, with the world-renowned Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens and the Constantia and Tokai Winelands. These connect to the cosy coastal towns of False Bay's Kalk Bay
, Fish Hoek and Simon's Town. The two sides of the peninsula meet at the windswept and breathtakingly beautiful Table Mountain National Park at
Cape Point and the Cape of Good Hope.
Tourist InformationCape Town Tourism Visitor Information Center Pinnacle Building, corner of Burg Street and Castle Street
Tel: (021) 426 4260.
Website:
www.tourismcapetown.com Opening hours: Mon-Fri 0800-1800, Sat 0830-1400, Sun 0900-1300 (summer); Mon-Fri 0800-1730, Sat 0830-1300, Sun 0900-1300 (winter).
There is also a visitor information center at the Clock Tower Precinct, at the V&A Waterfront (tel: (021) 405 4500). There are many other information centers situated around the peninsula, including Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens, The Pavilion in Muizenberg, Sivuyile College in Gugulethu, the Tyger Valley Shopping Center and Cape Town International Airport.
Key Attractions:Table Mountain Cape Town's defining landmark is also one of the city's greatest tourist attractions. A cable car trip to the 1,086m (3,563ft) summit takes just six minutes and the state-of-the-art gondola rotates through 360 degrees on the way up. Once there, more than 2km (1.2 miles) of pathways lead walkers over the massif, with breathtaking views of the city and ocean below. A bistro, perched right on the summit, is by far the most incredible sundowner spot in Africa.
A popular option is for day-trippers to take a one-way ticket up and then climb down Platteklip Gorge - although visitors should take care. The local Mountain Rescue teams (tel: (021) 948 9900
or 107 in an emergency) carry out over 100 rescues a year. The routes up and down the mountain are treacherous and sheer cliff faces with buffeting winds are a very real danger. Peering over the edge of the mountain, no matter how tempting, is simply not a good idea. Furthermore, the weather can change in a matter of minutes and mist and darkness descend very quickly. Hikers should carry water, food, sunblock, a silver 'space blanket' to prevent hypothermia and a mobile phone. There have also been muggings on the mountain.
For the wary wanderer,
High Adventure Africa (tel: (021) 689 1234;
www.highadventure.co.za) offers guided hikes up the mountain.
Tafelberg Road (lower cable station)
Tel: (021) 424 8181.
Website:
www.tablemountain.net Opening hours: Daily 0800-2200 (Dec-Jan); daily 0830-2030 (Feb-Mar); daily 0830-1830 (Apr); daily 0830-1800 (May-mid-Sep); daily 0830-1900 (mid-Sep-Oct); 0830-2000 (Nov).
Admission charge.
Victoria & Alfred Waterfront The creation of this waterfront, known as the V&A Waterfront, was possibly Cape Town's best commercial idea, transforming a rundown harbor area into a booming center of tourism, culture, leisure and business. Renovated Victorian warehouses, offices and buildings created in the Victorian vernacular style, and many dozens of cafes and restaurants complete this waterside area and working harbor. A host of boat and yacht charter operations tout for business and it is worth taking one of the many cruises around the docks (see
Tours of the City).
The Waterfront is also home to the world-class Two Oceans Aquarium. Feeding in the huge predator tanks takes place daily at 1500 and should not be missed. Aquarium dives can also be arranged. Then, with over 250 retail outlets, the
Victoria Wharf Shopping Center
is another premier attraction. The Waterfront Trading Company and the Red Shed Craft Workshop supply local arts and crafts, while, in summer, various music acts perform at the open-air ampitheater.
The Clock Tower Precinct is the departure point for the Robben Island ferry and is also packed with shops, bars and restaurants, and has a tourist office and an office for South African National Parks. During the initial construction of the area, the ruins of the Dutch East India Military installation, dating back to between 1715 and 1726, were discovered and are now on show to the public. The Waterfront Canal, linking the Waterfront and the Cape Town International Convention Center and passing through a residential marina, opened in June 2003.
Dock Road, off Coen Steytler Avenue, Beach or Portswood Road, or Ebenezer Road, off the Western Boulevard
Tel: (021) 408 7600.
Website:
www.waterfront.co.za Opening hours: Daily 24 hours; shops are open daily 0900-2100.
Free admission.
Two Oceans Aquarium
Dock Road
Tel: (021) 418 3823.
Website:
www.aquarium.co.za Opening hours: Daily 0930-1800.
Admission charge.
Robben Island Visiting Robben Island, a UNESCO World Heritage Site 12km (7.5 miles) from Cape Town in Table Bay, is one of the most profoundly moving experiences in South Africa. The infamous men-only prison and former leper colony was home to a generation of the senior statesmen of Africa, incarcerated because of their political beliefs. The most famous inmate was, of course, Nelson Mandela, who spent 18 years of his 27-year sentence here. The daily Robben Island Tour leaves from the Nelson Mandela Gateway
at the V&A Waterfront Clock Tower Precinct. Once on the island, guided tours are all given by former political prisoners here, while the first-class museum situated in the old prison buildings offers a wealth of information on this period of South Africa's history. There is more to Robben Island than politics and history, however. The physical beauty of the island itself is magnificent, with penguin and seal colonies, as well as the fantastic view of Cape Town.
Nelson Mandela Gateway and Robben Island
Tel: (021) 413 4200
or 409 5100.
Website:
www.robben-island.org.za Opening hours: Ferries depart daily 0900-1500 on the hour (weather permitting). The complete tour takes 3 hours 30 minutes.
Admission charge.
Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens Sprawling over a magnificent 528 hectares (1,325 acres) and home to 5,000 indigenous plant species, Kirstenbosch is rated one of the top botanical gardens in the world. With stunningly beautiful formal gardens dotted with African stone sculptures, Kirstenbosch is a delightful place for a picnic, a stroll or even an energetic hike through the natural
fynbos (indigenous and unique to the Western Cape) and forest on the lower slopes of Table Mountain. Attractions include a forest trail for the blind, a protea garden, a water-wise garden, a useful plants garden and a fragrance garden, as well as a cycad amphitheater, a glasshouse complete with baobab tree, an authentic African mud hut, a gift shop, garden center, bookshop, restaurants and cafe.
Rhodes Drive, Newlands
Tel: (021) 799 8783.
Website:
www.kirstenbosch.co.za Opening hours: Daily 0800-1900 (Sep-Mar); daily 0800-1800 (Apr-Aug).
Admission charge.
Company Gardens Jan van Riebeek (the first commander of the Dutch colony at the Cape) ordered the planting of Company Gardens in 1652, to serve as a fruit and vegetable supply for the visiting ships. Nowadays, the gardens are a green lung for the city center. The park is not just a botanical delight but is also home to St George's Cathedral, the Houses of Parliament, the South African National Gallery, the South African Museum and Planetarium
and the Jewish
Museum
and
Holocaust Center.
The Anglican St George's Cathedral has been in existence for over 100 years but is also a potent symbol of anti-apartheid resistance. It has been the site of many a political rally in the past and, until 1996, Nobel Peace Prize winner Desmond Tutu was archbishop here.
The Houses of Parliament, which flank the eastern edge of the gardens, are a blend of Georgian and Victorian styles of architecture. Designed by the British architect Harry Greaves, they were completed in 1885 when the parliament became the seat of British expansion into Africa. This is where the ‘architect of apartheid', Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd, was assassinated in 1966. It is also where Nelson Mandela gave his inaugural speech as president of the ‘new South Africa' in 1994.
The South African National Gallery contains one of the finest collections of South African and international art in the country and has regular exhibitions of work from around the world.
The South African Museum is an excellent place for visitors to spend a couple of hours learning about the natural and political history of South Africa. It also boasts the oldest African artworks, the Lydenburg Heads, which date back to 500BC, as well as a superb whale exhibit and a shop, located on Orange Street.
In the Planetarium, the real-time night sky displays are an entrancing introduction to the stellar delights of Southern Africa.
The Jewish Museum, housed in a modern granite complex, covers the history of immigrant Jews from Eastern Europe to South Africa and displays include religious art, a stain glass window depicting the Ten Commandments in Hebrew, and a reconstruction of a Lithuanian village. The adjoining and moving Holocaust Center tells the story, in multimedia format using videos, photography and personal recordings of survivors, of the Nazi occupation of Germany in the WWII. Towards the end it draws comparisons to some aspects of apartheid by looking at the consequences of racism and oppression, and there are video interviews of Jews who moved to Cape Town to escape Nazi Germany. Government Avenue (between Wale Street and Orange Street), Gardens
Opening hours: Daily 1000-1700.
Free admission.
South African National Gallery
Government Avenue
Tel: (021) 467 4660.
Website:
www.iziko.org.za/sang Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1700.
Admission charge.
South African Museum
25 Queen Victoria Street
Tel: (021) 481 3800.
Website:
www.iziko.org.za/sam Opening hours: Daily 1000-1700.
Admission charge; free Sun.
Planetarium
25 Queen Victoria Street
Tel: (021) 481 3900.
Website:
www.iziko.org.za/planetarium Opening hours: Shows Mon-Fri 1400 (excluding first Mon of the month), Tues 2000, Sat and Sun 1200, 1300 and 1430.
Admission charge.
Jewish Museum and Holocaust Center
88 Hatfield Street
Tel: (021) 465 1546.
Website:
www.sajewishmuseum.co.za or www.ctholocaust.co.za Opening hours: Sun-Thurs 1000-1700, Fri 1000-1400.
Admission charge.
Koopmans De Wet House Built in 1701, Koopmans De Wet House reflects patrician life at the Cape in the 18th century. Designed in the distinctive ‘Cape Dutch' architectural style (a style repeated in many of the grand manor houses on rural estates and recognizable by curly gables) the house is also furnished with fine examples of Cape craftsmanship. The quiet, cool and darkened interior is also a tranquil retreat from the bustle and heat of the city center.
35 Strand Street
Tel: (021) 481 3935.
Website:
www.iziko.org.za/koopmans Opening hours: Tues-Thurs 1000-1700.
Admission charge.
Beaches Cape Town boasts some of the most spectacular beaches in the world. With a long summer and balmy winter days in between the rain, these are an irresistible attraction all year round. There is a beach to suit just about every taste - from the trendy spots, where tanned bikini bodies are the order of the day, via the more family orientated, easy-swim sites, to wild and rugged sundowner spots.
Set along the stunning panorama of the Twelve Apostles mountain range, beaches on the Atlantic seaboard are several degrees colder than those on the False Bay side, which are warmed slightly by the L'Agulhas current that flows up from Cape Agulhas further around the coast.
Despite being too cold to swim, the beaches on the Atlantic seaboard are hugely popular and real estate here is hot property - the stretch of mansions that line the coast is known as Millionaire's Row. The suburb of Clifton has four beaches, one of which, Fourth Beach, is Cape Town's premier beach spot and the preferred place for the beautiful people to pose.
An alternative, with a California feel and a vibey row of restaurants and bars close at hand, is nearby Camps
Bay, where the dazzling swathe of beach has been awarded a Blue Flag. Noordhoek and Kommetjie, both part of Long Beach, are accessible via the Chapman's Peak Drive toll road. These far-flung beaches are still quite deserted and Noordhoek can be dangerous for lone walkers, particularly after dark.
False Bay offers its own set of coastal delights, quite different from the chilly counterparts on the Atlantic side. With warmer waters, the stretch of Muizenberg beach and little coves and inlets of Kalk
Bay
, St James and
Fish Hoek offers delightful swimming, with smaller waves and a family feel. Formerly a whaling station and a prisoner of war camp, Boulders has a string of delightful coves that are always sheltered from the frequent and blustering ‘southeaster' wind. However, visitors to Boulders will have to share their beach with quite a crowd... of African Penguins. The colony of penguins is protected and although these patient birds are happy to pose for photographs, there is a hefty fine for ‘wilfully disturbing' them.
Further Distractions:Bo-Kaap Museum Built in the mid 1760s, the Bo-Kaap Museum was originally the home of Turkish scholar, Abu Bakr Effendi, and is the oldest extant residence in the Muslim community, as well as a rare example of urban Cape Dutch architecture. The furnishings are typical of an 18th-century Cape Town Muslim residence, right down to the main bedroom - an authentic bridal suite. Effendi was a revered Arabic teacher and wrote one of the first texts that documented the emergence of South Africa's second language Afrikaans (a language developed from 17th-century Dutch).
71 Wale Street
Tel: (021) 481 3939.
Website:
www.iziko.org.za/bokaap Opening hours: Mon-Sat 0930-1630.
Admission charge.
Castle of Good HopeConstruction began on this five-pointed, star-shaped castle (originally a Dutch fortress) in 1666, which makes it the oldest colonial building in the country. Perhaps the most visible symbol of the colonial occupation of Cape Town and South Africa, the Castle of Good Hope became the apartheid government's military headquarters in 1948. However, since the liberation of South Africa in 1994, South Africa's oldest building has done much to polish up its tarnished image and has become very much a museum of the people. The castle hosts alternative art exhibitions and cultural events. Also within the castle, the
William Fehr Collection is a superb record of colonial Cape art and culture.
Corner of Darling Street and Castle Street
Tel: (021) 464 1260/4.
Website:
www.castleofgoodhope.co.za or www.iziko.org.za/castle Opening hours: Daily 0900-1600; guided tours daily 1100, 1200 and 1400.
Admission charge.
Century City Just 10 minutes from the city center, the second largest mall in the southern hemisphere after the
Gateway Mall in Durban,
Canal Walk is located in the massive and architecturally astounding Century City development, which is also home to Africa's first full-scale theme park,
Ratanga Junction, with over 30 rides, as well as an entertainment complex, complete with clubs, pubs and restaurants. The
MTN Sciencenter provides a myriad of scientific distractions for children of all ages, with over 250 interactive displays and a 200-seat multimedia arena. The 16-hectare (40-acre) man-made
Intaka Island is a haven for bird life, while boat rides on the 4km (2.5 miles) of canals are also available.
Century City, Century Boulevard, Milnerton
Tel: (021) 550 7000.
Website:
www.centurycity.co.za Canal Walk Shopping Center
Tel: (021) 555 4433.
Website:
www.canalwalk.co.za Opening hours: Mon-Fri and Sun 1000-2100, Sat 0900-2100.
Free admission, charge for car park.
Ratanga Junction
Tel: 08612 00300.
Website:
www.ratanga.co.za Opening hours: Wed-Fri 1000-1700, Sat 1000-1800, Sun 1000-1700 (end of Nov-May); Mon-Fri 1000-1700, Sat 1000-1800, Sun 1000-1700 (15 Dec-9 Jan).
Admission charge.
MTN Sciencenter
407 Canal Walk
Tel: (021) 529 8100.
Website:
www.mtnsciencenter.org.za Opening hours: Mon-Thurs 0930-1800, Fri-Sat 0930-2000, Sun 1000-1800.
Admission charge.
Gold of Africa Museum Although gold is more often associated with South Africa's ‘City of Gold', Johannesburg, Cape Town's Gold of Africa Museum is focused entirely on all that glitters and is indeed gold. Located in the historic, 18th-century Martin Melck House, this museum is all about the history and artistry of African gold, with a number of dazzling temporary and permanent exhibitions.
96 Strand Street
Tel: (021) 405 1540.
Website:
www.goldofafrica.com Opening hours: Mon-Sat 0930-1700.
Admission charge.
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