Description
1 Verwood Street, off Old Boyes Drive, Cape Town, Western Cape 7945An enchanting retreat with easy access to Cape Town, its Peninsula, legendary beaches and Winelands. Enjoy breathtaking panoramic views from Table Mountain to the South Atlantic Ocean. At the epicentre of Greater Cape Town and gracing the mountainside above Lakeside on the temperate False Bay Coastline, this splendid Manor House offers exceptional personal service and outstanding hospitality to the discerning visitor. 2 Executive Suites large & luxuriously furnished and 1 smaller Standard Room.
A little piece of heaven situated on the east side of Table Mountain, where you will be wowed by the beautiful furniture, delightful surroundings and breathtaking scenery. *Please note: A tourist tax of 1% is not included in the rate and needs to be paid directly to the hotel.
Hotel facilities
- Room Service
- airport shuttle service (on request)
- Airport transfers
- Car rental desk
- City tours*
- Concierge
- Currency Exchange
- Dry cleaning*
- Express check-in/check-out
- Free (non-secure) parking
- Free newspaper
- Gardens
- Gift Shop
- Laundry*
- Limousine Service*
- Luggage room
- Night Porter
- Parking
- Porter
- Postal and fax service
- Reception desk
- Safety Deposit Boxes
- Shoe shine
- Gift Shop
- Spa treatments
- Terrace
- Theatre reservations
- Tour desk
- Valet parking
- VIP services
- Well-being massage
- Wi-Fi
- Wi-Fi in public areas
*May incur an additional costRoom facilities
- Air Conditioning
- Alarm clock
- Bathrobe
- Cable television
- CD library
- CD player
- Climate Control
- Complimentary toiletries
- Connecting Rooms (r)
- DVD Player
- Private Bathroom
- Fan(r)
- Slippers
- Telephone
- Television
- Under-floor heating
- Wi-Fi(r)
- Work Desk
- Work desk with lamp
- Modem Access
- Hairdryer
- Mini-bar
- Make-up mirror
- Safe
- Mineral water and fruit
- Separate Hanging Closet
- Private bathroom with bathtub(r)
(r)This facility is room dependentRestaurant
- Colona Castle Dining Hall: Chef's inspired presentations are an artful combination of the Cape's finest and freshest organically grown ingredients - a rare culinary celebration in the superb architecture of the candlelit Dining Hall. Colona Castle was rated number 8 out of 100 Best restaurants with rooms worldwide in the 2005 Observer UK Award 100 Best places to eat this summer.
Children policy
Cancellation policy
- Cancel free of charge up to 7 days before check-in, else first night rate
Smoking policy
- Smoking not permitted in guest rooms
Check-in time: 14:00 Check-out time: 11:00
Local Attractions
- Museums: 3.0 Kilometre
- Silvermine Nature Reserve: 8.0 Kilometre
- Kalk Bay Harbour, Restaurants & Shops: 5.0 Kilometre
- Scenic walks
- V & A Waterfront: 21.0 Kilometre
- Whalewatching (May to November): 3.0 Kilometre
- Golf - 4 world-class Golf Courses
- Constantia & Stellenbosch Wine Routes : 5.0 Kilometre
- Simonstown & the Penguins at Boulders Beach: 15.0 Kilometre
- Birdwatching: 5.0 Kilometre
- Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens : 15.0 Kilometre
- Muizenberg Beach: 3.0 Kilometre
- Cape Point Nature Reserve: 20.0 Kilometre
- Hout Bay Harbour: 25.0 Kilometre
- Chapmans Peak Drive: 15.0 Kilometre
- Table Mountain Cableway: 25.0 Kilometre
- Watersports: 3.0 Kilometre
Location
- Nearest airport: Cape Town
- Nearest train station: False Bay Train Station
- Directions: After leaving the airport, follow the sign to the N2 in the direction of Cape Town. Continue until the road starts to rise at the foot of Table Mountain (approximately 10km), turn left onto the off ramp signposted to M3 Muizenberg. Continue on this M3 Highway to the end (approximately 13km). At the traffic lights at top of the ramp, turn right into Westlake Drive, (M42). At the first set of traffic lights, turn left and follow the road pasted the Westlake Golf Course, until it comes to an end. Turn right into BOYES DRIVE. The road rises and travels along the mountain contour (3 to 4km). Turn left into Old Boyes Drive, (you will see a directional sign to Colona Castle) and continue down until you reach a hairpin bend (1/2km). Turn off to the left and keep to the upper road, Verwood Street. There is another directional sign to Colona Castle. Colona Castle is the first property on the left, painted yellow.
Credit cards accepted by hotel
With its stunning location, tucked into the arms of a broad bay, surrounded by wild, white-sand beaches and set against the canvas of Table Mountain, Cape Town is one of the most beautiful cities in the world. Affectionately nicknamed the Mother City, the city is the epicentre of South Africas Western Cape region and the seat of South Africas parliament.
Originally home to the nomadic Khoi people for at least 30,000 years, the Cape Peninsula was first settled, on 6 April 1652, by Dutch sailors led by Jan van Riebeek of the Dutch East India Company. Portuguese explorer Bartholemew Diaz had already discovered the Cape in 1488 and christened it Cabo Tormentoso or Cape of Storms, but Portugals King John II later renamed it Cape of Good Hope. In 1795, it became a British colony, when the British Empire extended its borders. The city has been the first port of call for many a European settler, entrepreneur and religious refugee, as well as for Indian, Madagascan and South-East Asian slaves. All these people interspersed with the local Khoi and Xhosa population and the city became a melting pot of cultures, religions, styles and flavours. Nowadays, traders from other African countries (such as Malawi, Zimbabwe, Ethiopia and Nigeria) also favour Cape Town, particularly because there are so many tourists there. The city has a reputation for being the least xenophobic and most welcoming city in South Africa, with a strong diversity and open-minded benevolence. Capetonians are proud of their easygoing and laid-back nature, jokingly known as the Cape coma, so different from their more frenetic counterparts in the north.
On the streets, a great variety of languages are spoken, while stalls selling all manner of crafts, food and textiles are squashed among American-style malls, European fashion boutiques, art galleries, luxury hotels, backpacker lodges and the ubiquitous chains. In summer, it is difficult to escape the glitz of the international media, whether film crews, fashion shoots, music videos or commercials, lured by great foreign exchange rates, exotic locations, a world-class infrastructure and seemingly endless supply of drop-dead gorgeous models and extras.
Although Cape Town is undeniably on the up and up, it is still surrounded by the ever-visible legacy of apartheid. The first glimpse of the city coming from the airport is of shanty towns or townships, a hangover from the days of the notorious Group Areas Act, which reserved the prime city land for whites only. At the foot of Table Mountain, the area known as District Six (once populated by the local mixed-race community known as Cape coloured), now renamed Zonnebloem, is still somewhat of a ghost town, although housing development is underway. The inhabitants were moved to the bleak and windswept Cape Flats, which has become notorious as the gangland of disaffected Cape Town youth. Even today, relatively few non-whites live in the more upmarket suburbs, although some of the former townships are gradually turning into middle-class estates as the economic situation improves.
Nevertheless, natural beauty spreads out from Cape Town. To the south, the impeccable beaches of the Cape Peninsula are fringed with pretty towns and mansions ending in the beautiful Cape Point nature reserve. To the east lies the mysterious magnificence of the Overberg, the rolling plains, deserted beaches and lofty mountains of the Southern Cape. To the north and northwest, the misty and severe splendour of the West Coast, the austere wilderness of the Cedarberg and the verdant valley of Ceres await the traveller.
Many visitors think that Cape Town is best during the peak summer months (December to February) but it is attractive all year round. Summer brings long, hot beach days and balmy outdoor evenings, but they could also be described as sweltering and overcrowded and there is the chance of the legendary strong southeaster wind. Spring (September to November) brings blooms of flowers, while autumn (March to May) promises a golden haze of warm days. Winter (June to August), although wet and often cold, is interspersed with weeks that are both warm and clear. The city is free of tourists and wonderfully green; dolphins and whales stop in the many small bays along the coastline, and waterfalls, the most spectacular sight of this secret season, streak silver paths down the mountains.