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South Africa architecture tour

country:South Africa
location:Western Cape 
departures:2010: 4 Dec
price:From R 51,100 - R 54,100 (11 days) excluding flights. Price is based on two people sharing. Depends on departure date. Optional single supplement R 4,430 - R 6,600 . See below for full price inclusions
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vouchers:Gift vouchers can be used with this holiday

introduction to South Africa architecture tour

Discover for yourself why Cape Dutch architecture is unique...an eclectic mosaic of vernacular design and a fascinating blend of local ingenuity.

Look into the lives, times and significant bequests of three iconic men: Herbert Baker, Cecil John Rhodes and Simon van der Stel, through the legacies. Enjoy private visits to stately homes, and a behind-the-scenes tour of the Houses of Parliament. Witness sustainable solutions to challenging contemporary issues. Experiential learning happens when you ‘discover by doing’. You get to unravel the diversity and explore the heritage of the Cape, on the southern tip of Africa.

We have a portfolio of guest lecturers with unsurpassed local knowledge who lead each tour, taking you to less-travelled spots, hidden gems and places you couldn’t get into yourself. You’ll hear multiple perspectives from these entertaining storytellers, whose calibre is our distinguishing difference.

We use accredited guides as tour leaders who look after the practicalities and accompany you at all times. Itineraries are researched and crafted with enormous attention to pace and variety. Intentionally small groups allow for insider access, let you engage and enquire directly and understand content in context.

Price includes:
Hotel accommodation (4-star), all breakfasts, ten lunches and five dinners with wine, water, coffee, four wine tasting opportunities. All admissions, all gratuities, all porterage, the services of guest lecturers and tour leaders, all transportation from arrival to departure.
day-by-day itinerary
Day 1:Defining forces of the landscape. Table Mountain is the city’s icon, a towering mass at the base of the continent. It pinpoints Cape Town’s location in Africa and invites exploration because it shapes the city both physically and historically. Follow the original footprints and contours around Lions Head to the crest of Signal Hill looking over the colourful city and waterfront mecca. Meet invited guests over dinner in a private home nestling on its slopes. Overnight Cape Town for the first of seven nights.
Day 2:Coastlines and timelines. Trace the indelible marks on the landscape on your journey to the legendary meeting place of two oceans, along both coastlines, through the picturesque fishing villages of Kalk Bay and naval base of Simon’s Town, to the protected land-based colony of African penguins and back along scenically splendid Chapman’s Peak, past mountain-hugging villas of the Cape Riviera and beaches where the locals flock for sundowners on the rocks.
Day 3:Urban landscapes. Stand in the Castle precincts to hear how the officials ran the settlement for nearly 150 years, before it became the symbolic heart of the apartheid state 150 years later. Meander through the heart of the city taking in vestiges of 17th & 18th century architecture through the original bartering hub Greenmarket Sq, still a bustling flea market. Wander around an eclectic mix of restored buildings bordering the Bo Kaap with its cobbled streets, past colourful 19th century Dutch and Georgian-influenced houses, mosques and shrines. Dine on a Pan African banquet in the courtyard of an historic building housing a world famous collection of gold artefacts from ancient African civilizations.
Day 4:Rural landscapes. The cradle of wine making is the Constantia valley because canny Cape governor Simon van der Stel plumped for this delectable spot on his retirement in 1696, which is why his was such a model farm. View this man for all seasons as a metaphor of his times and track how he added enormous value to the Cape - while considering the invisible hands that toiled the ordered vineyards and built the glorious gables. Fittingly, dine in the heart of this valley on a Cape Malay dishes in a Relais & Chateaux establishment.
Day 5:Architects of the empire. Swathes of prime land were bequeathed to the nation by Cecil John Rhodes at the height of his power and position, who employed Herbert Baker to (re)create a place appropriate to his colossal persona and imperial dream. A guided tour around the former prime ministers residence illustrates the uniquely 'Cape Baker' features and influence of the Arts and Crafts movement. Drive through the university terraced on the mountain slopes to lunch at a site where Rhodes dreamed and schemed many things - that is Baker’s granite memorial to him. The afternoon and evening are open for you to explore more of CJR’s legacy while looking around the botanical jewel of Kirstenbosch or relax at your leisure.
Day 6:Heritage and habitat. Cape Town is an honest city. There are no facades to hide the bad and the ugly. You see the sprawl of squatter settlements and endless rows of houses when you visit a township and meet a community involved in the process of building their own homes with an eco-friendly, re-designed concept of 'low cost' housing. Driving around you take in the elements of a post colonial past and a post modern present. After lunch on the quayside, you hear about the development of the Victoria & Alfred Waterfront, the historical working harbour and why it is too vibrant a mix of visual delights and physical inconsistencies to be just another fashionable tourist destination.
Day 7:Visible legacies. A large legacy of the British period is seen in the city’s urban fabric, in preserved Victorian and Edwardian buildings, such as the stately Houses of Parliament which we explore in a behind-the-scenes visit, followed by several splendid examples in adjacent Queen Victoria street and Long street. Take in sites such as Africa’s first skyscraper, a landmark art deco structure and enjoy lunch within this central location, experiencing diverse periods and hearing wide ranging views.
Day 8:Ordered landscapes. Cape Dutch homesteads with their symmetrical gables and grid like gardens attest to a centuries old effort to impose the order of European material opulence on an African landscape. Relax over lunch in the tranquility of the country’s premier wine estate conceptualised as a model estate some 300 years ago, strolling around the manor house, expansive gardens and interactive centre before staying over in Stellenbosch, a university town of singular beauty and charm for 2 nights, free to wander its oak lined streets with Cape Dutch frontages.
Day 9:Classic and contemporary. Look around a complex which showcases four different architectural periods, highlighting the furnishings and gardens of each house, from earliest pioneer cottage, through Cape Dutch, Georgian to High Victorian. Take in select modern wineries, one an international award-winning design, another hewn from rock, one incorporating top notch technology while maximising natural gravity flow, all stylish and high profile. For a classic take on architectural design and farmyard layout, visit a perennial award winner, built in the 1600’s. That evening your welcomed into a private domain to sample wines in an atmospheric cellar and experience traditional South African food and hospitality by 9th generation owners.
Day 10:Issues then and now. Travelling through the magnificent Groot Drakenstein valley you pass a hamlet created by missionaries to assist the freed slaves, and a model village created by CJ Rhodes, lunching on an estate under these mountains. Hear stories about the valley going back some 8 000 years, in an informative museum located in a 1740 wine cellar that chronicles the movements of those who tilled the soil, and reveals their neglected histories. Walk around the picturesque village of Franschhoek before dinner. The name of the town means French corner because Huguenots fleeing religious persecution settled here in 1688, bringing along their wine knowledge, transforming agriculture - and architecture. Then celebrate you last night at dinner in this 'gourmet capital'. Overnight in Franschhoek.
Day 11:Patriotism unpacked. As you walk around the slopes of the enormous granite rock that looms above the town of Paarl you'll hear about the symbolic significance of a monument that chronicles the development of one of the world’s youngest languages, Afrikaans. Delve into the rise and fall of the Afrikaners to understand the patriotic impulse that gave rise to this. Relax over lunch on the veranda of Africa's only Relais & Chateaux Gourmand restaurant in a transformed homestead dating from 1717, now a national monument. Then move through the town's miles long Main Street flanked by well preserved buildings, visiting sights to deepen your understanding of the prevailing culture, before being dropped off at the airport for your return flight.
small group cultural tours
Typically you will be sharing your experiences with between 4-20 like minded travellers (depending on the trip, operator and how many others are booked on the trip) and you'll have a group leader with you. Whether you are travelling alone or with friends it's good value, and a great way to meet new people! While itineraries are pre-planned there is some flexibility and you'll have plenty of privacy. This trip will appeal to travellers of all ages who enjoy meeting new people as well as experiencing new cultures.
how this holiday makes a difference
Our belief is that each step we take matters, and that door opening journeys are about travelling with a curious mind, an open heart, and light steps. Our aim is to share South Africa’s cultural richness, diversity and natural beauty in such a way as to beneficiate all involved.

Environment

We uphold the philosophy of giving back, making a voluntary donation to Food and Trees for Africa, calculated on the carbon footprint accumulated by each visitor's journey to, from and within South Africa.

We are linked to Friends of Conservation for alternative ways to participate in projects that either extract CO2 from the atmosphere, reduce harmful emissions, or protect wildlife and bring benefit to communities.

We endorse the South Africa Sustainability Seafood Initiative (SASSI), abiding by their approved seafood guidelines when making selections on clients’ behalf.

We support The Biodiversity and Wine Initiative, which applies diversity guidelines to the wine industry by choosing its members when selecting wine estates to showcase. We believe in leaving only our footprints and provide all visitors with Golden rules which in the natural environment include not picking flowers or removing any items, feeding the animals, littering, or deviating from paths – and in the built environment not wasting water, being ostentatious with possessions, handing out randomly or behaving respectfully among other cultures.

We undertake to lighten our impact wherever possible, such as using the internet as our primary communication medium, limiting the size of groups, consciously selecting low impact options, biodegradable materials, recycling paper, and implementing turn it off policies with equipment. To mitigate the impact of the long haul travel, we offer several add-on options to our fixed tours.

Community
We are a member of the Open Africa network of Afrikatourism, a collaborative movement linking the splendours of Africa in a network of tourism routes from Cape to Cairo, with the aim of creating jobs in synergy with conservation, under the patronage of Nelson Mandela.

We support Fair Trade in Tourism in South Africa (FTTSA) which is based on fair share, democracy, respect, reliability, transparency and sustainability, and its members wherever possible.

We seek out initiatives such as !Khwa ttu San Cultural and Educational Centre that highlights issues facing minority cultures, Solms Delta museum for its oral history focus, Grootbos private nature reserve for its dedication to the Cape Floral Kingdom and eco tourism benchmarking, and Bushmans Kloof wilderness retreat for highlighting San culture.

We support only local initiatives: family run hotels chosen for their warmth of welcome and charm, and owner managed restaurants that offer seasonal produce and regional wines. We select preferred service providers that are local and owner managed, such as for our transport and in our links we seek similarly-minded associates who share our vision such as Mogalakwena Artist’s Retreat.

Believing in the principles of abundance and co-operation, we offer our web based hub for the beneficiation of all involved with us, while supporting others who subscribe to our principles.

We provide our clients with a comprehensive pre trip information briefing including suggested reading, safety hints, etc. as well as a customised information pack on arrival, made of recycled paper sourced locally, containing a 3D map and a locally crafted gift (with the opportunity on several of the tours to meet the makers in person). As a principle, we contextualise the historical, geographic and social background regardless of the specific focus of a tour, and we select useful additional nuggets to inform free time choices.

Operationally, we subscribe to an ethical code of conduct. We practise fair trade policies. We uphold high delivery standards and train wherever required, since our undertaking to our clients is seamless service and attention to detail. We passionately advocate raising the tourism industry bar and take responsibility for the upliftment and awareness this challenge requires.

Economically the tourism industry is the biggest generator of jobs in the Western Cape, and unemployment is the biggest threat to social stability in the land. Taking the opportunity to showcase what is unique to the Cape, telling our stories informatively - and having them ’witnessed’ - substantiates our sense of self, our pride of place and our purpose of being.

Tourism can be good and bad for destinations & local people.

We carefully screen every holiday against our criteria for responsible travel.

'Look behind the brochure' to find how each holiday makes a difference (see left).

We don't claim to be perfect - there is no global accreditation - but we've led the way since 2001 and screened 1000's of holidays.

We invite every traveller to write a review about their experiences and responsible tourism.

This valuable feedback is sent to the people who run the holidays. We keep a very close eye on it and take off holidays that don't live up to our standards.

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