Where to Stay in South Africa - PHG Consulting

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Where to Stay in South Africa - PHG Consulting
Where to Stay in South Africa
by David Cogswell / May 23, 2018

Cape Town, South Africa. Photo: LMspencer / Shutterstock.com.

On a recent tour of South Africa sponsored by South African Tourism and
based on the theme of the 2018 Nelson Mandela Centenary, I stayed at four
very different hotels, providing a brief sampling of the great diversity of the
country, its people, cultures, landscapes and certainly its hotels.

Michelangelo Hotel
(135 West Street, Sandton, 2146 Johannesburg, South Africa)
The Michelangelo is an elegant, luxury hotel in Sandton, an upscale suburb
and the economic hub of Johannesburg, where multinational corporations
gravitate to establish their African headquarters.
Where to Stay in South Africa - PHG Consulting
The Renaissance-style hotel is in a cluster of buildings built around Nelson
Mandela Square, formerly known as Sandton Square. It is now highlighted by
an often-photographed, six-meter statue of Mandela. The plaza is surrounded
by restaurants, outdoor cafes, hotels and shops, as well as a huge mall
packed with several levels of stores.
The six-story Michelangelo is built on an atrium plan around a rectangular
courtyard on the ground floor that houses the hotel bar and restaurant, with a
fountain over a pool with fish, green plants and a provocative sculpture of an
abstracted human form.

The view of the hotel's atrium.

The Renaissance theme is carried through the entire hotel, with colonnade
structures on the floors surrounding the atrium, and columns and capitals
framing the mirrors in the guest rooms. The guest rooms are decorated with
prints of images from classical Greece.
The Michelangelo is a 40-minute drive from Johannesburg’s O.R. Tambo
International Airport, when traffic is good. It is a 20-minute ride on the elevated
Where to Stay in South Africa - PHG Consulting
Gautrain, which costs 150 rand, about 12 dollars under current currency
exchange rates of 13 rand to a dollar. O.R. Tambo is the principle air hub in
southern Africa.
The location is a real plus, with its easy connection to the train in a city with
minimal public transportation options, and its proximity to the Michelangelo
Towers Mall and the Sandton Convention Centre.
The hotel is luxurious, opulent without being garish. Quality and sophistication
of design are reflected from every feature, from statues and fountains to its
spacious open center area reminiscent of a large cathedral.
The Michelangelo is the flagship property of Legacy Hotels and Resorts,
which also operates the Da Vinci, the Raphael and Michelangelo Towers in
the same area.

Southern Sun Elangeni
(63 Snell Parade, Durban, Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa)

During Africa’s Travel Indaba on May 8-10, 2018, the host hotel was the
Southern Sun Elangeni, which stands along the shore road on Durban’s
Golden Mile, overlooking the Indian Ocean.

The Elangeni is a solid, versatile hotel with friendly and efficient service and a
well-rounded menu of offerings. It is well equipped to serve the business
travel and convention markets.
The property is a 10-minute walk from Durban’s International Conference
Centre, also known as the Albert Luthuli Convention Centre, where Indaba
was held. As one of the main conference hotels, it was also a pick-up point for
shuttles to Durban’s ICC.
With its location across the street from the beach, the hotel is also an
excellent choice as a vacation accommodation. It caters to the family vacation
market with special family rooms and services.
The hotel has three restaurants on the ground floor and a restaurant with a
sun deck one level up, overlooking the hotel entrance and the beach. Most of
the rooms face the beach and offer Indian Ocean sunrises — very helpful for
those trying to get moving in the morning to attend meetings at the
conference.
The Southern Sun Elangeni is an ace accommodation for Durban, a city with
many hotel alternatives.
Where to Stay in South Africa - PHG Consulting
The Oyster Box
(2 Lighthouse Road, Umhlanga Rocks, 4319, Durban, South Africa)

About a 20-minute drive northward from Durban is Umhlanga Rocks, the
home of the singular The Oyster Box. Known for its definitive curry buffet at
The Ocean Terrace almost as much as it is known as a hotel, The Oyster Box
is a spectacular property. Its version of luxury is never gaudy or superficial,
but rather seems to reflect a subtle sense of design and vintage values.
Overlooking a beach that is part sand and part rocks, The Oyster Box belongs
to the Red Carnation group and is truly in the top tier of luxury hotels in the
world.

The vintage feeling of the hotel is much of its appeal, and its history is
reflected in its classic features, from its antique revolving door and spiral
staircase in the front lobby, to the old lighthouse that still stands along the
shore in front of the hotel.
The lighthouse dates back to 1863, when the Oyster Lodge was established
as an adjunct to a navigational beacon on the Indian Ocean. The original
Oyster Lodge was a cottage constructed of Burmese teak, corrugated iron
and concrete.
In 1952, the cottage and grounds were purchased by Ken O’Connor and his
sister Kay O’Connor Hill, who built it up, created a tea garden and restaurant,
and opened in 1954 as The Oyster Box Hotel.
It was purchased in 2006 by Red Carnation and given an extensive
restoration and renewal and reopened in 2009.
Today the property has 86 rooms and suites, a 24-seat movie theater,
dolphin-watching from two outdoor terraces, outdoor dining overlooking the
Indian Ocean, a swimming pool and access to the beach. The rooms are all
different and individually appointed.
Its glass chandeliers, abundant plants, hundreds of pieces of original fine art,
checkered tile floors, and the subtle sense of design harmony exhibited
throughout the hotel, makes it a voluptuous experience without ever seeming
glitzy.
Cape Grace Hotel
(West Quay Road, Victoria & Alfred Waterfront, Cape Town, South Africa)

Cape Grace lives up to its name as it graces the popular Victoria and Alfred
Waterfront in Cape Town with its stately presence. It would surely have to be
near the top of any listing of the many fine hotels in the area.

The 21-year old Cape Grace Hotel stands on a private quay between active
shipping docks on one side and a yacht marina on the other on Cape Town’s
bustling Victoria and Alfred Waterfront. The four-story structure overlooks
active docks, populated with colorful tugboats, cranes and barges. The views
of the harbor area, with Table Mountain as the all-pervasive backdrop, may be
the hotel’s most priceless feature.
The interior design of the hotel is based on nautical themes incorporating
many pieces of vintage Dutch wood furniture. The design is also consciously
influenced by the art of the Cape Millay people, with the idea that guests
should be reminded that they are in Africa when they are in their rooms.
The view from Cape Grace.

Cape Grace serves as a charming and well-located headquarters for a visit to
Cape Town. It has a spa, a pool, the Bascule Whisky Bar and the Signal
Restaurant, all elegantly appointed and cozy. The hotel has 120 rooms,
including three-, two- and one-bedroom apartments.
All the rooms are decorated differently from each other. The designers went
so far to distinguish them from each other as to incorporate one-of-a-kind,
hand-painted curtains created by local artisans. The carpets and décor in the
hallways vary from floor to floor, so the floors look different. If you go out of
the elevator on the wrong floor, you’ll know it.
The hotel is within a 10-minute walk from most of the attractions in the Victoria
and Alfred Waterfront area, including more than 450 restaurants and shops,
and the recently opened Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa.
The hotel caters to families with special services for kids — such a story time
and gingerbread painting — as part of a three-night family package, with four
hours of babysitting included.
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