Our Luxury Hotel Rooms

Category: Junior Suite

Out of Africa

Out of Africa is adventure with a compass — maps, atmosphere, and a sense of story. This Junior Suite gets there straight away: deep creams, sand tones, and dark wood, with a gallery wall above the bed that reads like someone’s personal archive — places, sketches, and the kind of maps that suggest you’ve arrived — without announcing it. There’s a desk-side chair with “I could write a novel here” energy (or at least a very convincing email), and the copper bath by the window does what it does best: looks quietly spectacular, then lets you get on with your evening. It’s not a theme. It’s a point of view — and it wears it well.

Description

High-speed Wi-Fi
Writing desk
Air conditioning
In-room safe
Mini-fridge
Complimentary bottled water
Tea/coffee facilities
DSTV
Hairdryer
Robes & slippers
Daily turndown service
In-room iPad / control tablet

Notable in-suite features:
In-room copper soaking bath

Related products

Executive Plus

Zambezi

Grand proportions. Calm authority. A kitchenette for when you want more than minibar snacks.

The Zambezi Suite understands power. Walk in and you'll find it in the room's proportions—high ceilings, generous floor space, twin wingback chairs positioned like thrones by the windows. The color palette is unapologetically neutral: cream, taupe, dove grey, punctuated by the warmth of dark timber floors and the glint of a crystal chandelier that knows its worth.

The suite has a kitchenette—microwave, mini-fridge, the works. Heat up dinner. Keep wine cold. Store leftovers from lunch. Not revolutionary, just useful when you're staying somewhere longer than a night.

The Zambezi is the fourth-longest river in Africa, carving through six countries with absolute certainty about its direction. This suite borrows that confidence. It's a room that knows what it is.

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Presidential Suite

Nelson Mandela

Where strength and grace occupy the same space. Named for the man who proved they could.

Nelson Mandela chose reconciliation over retribution. Strength and grace in one decision. This suite echoes that balance—bold architectural choices softened by thoughtful detail.

Vertical slats carve the space into zones without building walls. The black lacquered cabinetry anchors everything, while gold accents catch the light. There's a round dining table for real conversations, not room service on a tray. The bedroom centers on a tufted headboard in black velvet, flanked by portraits that understand what representation means.

The kitchenette has counter space and real storage—heat something up, keep wine chilled, handle yourself. A round dining table seats four for actual meals or working sessions. The ghost chair at the desk is the tell: transparency in a room that otherwise deals in weight. Mandela knew when to be immovable and when to yield. This suite gets that.

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Executive Suite

Marrakesh

Marrakesh is where you go to get lost on purpose. Winding souks, hidden riads, colors that don't exist anywhere else. If intoxicating could be a suite, this is it.

The bed sits under a draped canopy that makes you feel like royalty without trying. Turquoise horseshoe arches, brass lanterns casting patterns through carved screens, chartreuse and turquoise cushions that somehow make perfect sense together. This is the room where you sink into the daybed with mint tea and lose track of time. Happily.

Marrakesh perfected the riad—plain door hiding a private paradise. This suite borrowed that. Close the door, you're transported. Exotic, rich, yours.

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