Hotel Reviews in Africa
My company tries to get us into decent accommodations, but sometimes we don't find out the place is a rat trap until we are checked in. I thought to check PPRUNE but did not see a thread dedicated to reviewing hotels. (If I missed it...) Please use this thread to warn your fellow aircrew about the good, the bad, and the ugly hotels in Africa.
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Monrovia, Liberia- Golden Gate
Pretty Gross. The flight attendants were completely disgusted. The bathrooms were foul. The other pilot was not pleased to find a spider (over 5cm across) on his bed when he went to his room. I had rat poison behind my furniture in the room. Another of our crews actually had rats. Marble slab chairs in the little bar look great but not good for sitting more than 10 minutes. Pool is currently a brown/green pit behind the hotel. Prices were fairly high on beer and such.
On the positive: Beds were comfortable, air conditioning worked well, security was present, the staff was very nice. This Hotel will work, but I would look for something better. |
Accra, Ghana- Holiday Inn
Nice Hotel
Clean, friendly. Good bar, restaurant, pool, internet, very close to the airport. |
I guess South Africa is too Europeanised to be worth reporting on here, you have to pretty unlucky to get a bad hotel in SA.
As for the rest of the continent, elephants in the reception area, pubic hairs in the shower, hookers in the bed (room service), rusty springs poking through mattresses, no water or electricity, vervet monkeys jumping onto your shoulder when you're having an early morning pee, boomslangs on the balcony, transfers to the airport by donkey cart, unvarying diet of green slime, brown slime and grey slime for food, warm beer, cold coffee .......... been there, done that, got the T-shirts (and the ****s!) |
Sheraton Abuja
Nice hotel, obviously they have invested some money in the rooms which are better now. Nice lobby, good food and drinks.
Try the "Elephant bar" - but don't wonder about the majority of female guests ;-) |
Sheraton in Addis Ababa and the Kempinski in Djibouti are both very good hotels
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De Skyline Hotel, Lagos Airport
Just stayed here, it's close to the old domestic terminal ( Arik ). Basic, but reasonable price, if you book in advance. Food is edible and internet fairly fast (for this part of the world ). You don't have to leave the airport enviroment if you're nervous about Lagos.
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Abuja and Lagos
Thanks for recommending the Sheraton in Abuja. I will see if we can get in there. Any recs for Lagos?
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Lagos, Nigeria: Sheraton
Port Harcourt, Nigeria: Novotel Dakar, Senegal: Terrou Bi |
@Capetonian: If that is all your experience, you need to fire whoever has been making your recommendations.
@ELLS: Sheraton, Four Points, Radisson, Oriental, Lagos. If you are looking for multinational brands. |
Sorry, but I disagree with the assessment of the Abuja Sheraton. Half of the rooms face the highway and are very loud because of traffic and the round-the-clock horn honking at the intersection. Half of the rooms on the other side of the hotel are loud at night and into the early morning due to noise from the club. The only quiet rooms are on high floors overlooking the pool. The fools at the front desk don't even know on which side of the hotel their rooms are located! Less than half of the rooms have been renovated recently and the un-renovated rooms are quite shabby.
Only about 10% of the rooms at the Abuja Sheraton have internet. Those that do (mostly on the club floors) have slow, unreliable connections. The guest use computers in the lobby area are virus-ridden and slow. The food at the Abuja Sheraton (at Papillion, the main restaurant) is of marginal quality and very expensive. The breakfast buffet is disgusting. The Italian place is okay, but expensive. The steak house is excellent, but very, very expensive. The Elephant Bar is not the place to go for a quiet drink with your friends! It is full of the same aggressive hookers every night. On most nights Western males get accosted before they even enter the bar. If this is what you're looking for, the Abuja Sheraton is your place! I highly recommend the Abuja Hilton. It is the only decent place to stay in town. Comfortable, quiet rooms, excellent staff and excellent food. It's more expensive than the Sheraton, but worth every Naira. |
Southern Sun in Lusaka and Maputo, both really good service, cleanliness and food. Lusaka staff went out of their way to make us welcome.
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Wherever you may find yourself beware of the tap water and even the ice:8
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If you cant peal it or cook it........don't eat it.
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Le Chalet in Kisangani-DRC is absolutely great if you like dirty sheets, pillows about 2 cm thick, aircon that works on occasion, bed bugs, mossies, roaches and walls so sound proof that you can hear your neighbor fart and burp the whole night long. The internet also works some times but only in the bug infested dining area.
Enjoy! |
Dar es Salam
Try these best in town;
Kilimanjaro Kempinsk Movenpick Royal Palm Holiday Inn Hilton Southern Sun Sea Cliff Golden Tulip White Sands Paradise city Those are the best in town. U wont be dissapointed |
Mr Sloth
That would be the dining room in which breakfast consists of a tin of crappy instant coffee dumped on the table along with a bunch of dirty mugs and a flask of lukewarm water. Anything else (usually stale bread and fly riddled jam) has to be badgered out of the chef in the kitchen. Costs around USD15 a head for the brekkie on top of ridiculous room rates. |
S.R.T.
That would be the one. Took me 2 weeks to recover from the bed bug bites. Awesome place. |
hotels in africa
Recommend the Protea hotels in Kasombe and Lusaka ,Zambai. It has been over a year since my last trip to the copperbelt region. Very clean, Great food, great golfing regards Mel
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Cotonou, Benin?
They have us set up for the Novotel. We have not used it before. Anybody stay there recently?
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In South Africa, not that the information is particularly relevant, bad hotels are a rarity at the middle and bottom end of the market. Some of the smallest towns have excellent hotels and boarding houses which are as much suited to the Gladstone bag toting salesman of yesteryear as they are to the tourist of today. Hazards arise at the upper end of the market where sporadic mediocrity is often charaterized with horrendous prices.
An example should suffice to illustrate the point. Cape Town is a gross offender in the high price stakes considering itself, as it does, a worthy opponent to London for its attractions and ambiance. Without the advantage of any special offers I recently ran a price comparison between the Radisson Blu, Waterfront Cape Town and Radisson Blu, Portman Square London, same dates and equivalent rooms. The price for a double room at the Waterfront was SAR5,200 a night while London cost out at £267 which is just about half the price. You may take your pick as you choose but Cape Town is a dorp compared to London and nowhere near worthy of an equivalent or greater price structure. Johannesburg is a crime ridden slum and Graaf Reinet has much to commend it. In Nairobi the Stanley was good while the whores congregated at the circular bar at the Hilton. In Arusha there was once a hotel called the Arusha Hotel and there was always the dear old Pamodzi in Lusaka. |
Cotonou hotel
ELLS
I stayed in Novotel around a year ago, rooms fine, good internet. Hotel corridors dank and musty though. Restaurant was good. Benin Marina Hotel was very good too, fine pool area, good rooms. Novotel restaurant better in my opinion. Be aware of the mozzies when the sun goes down. |
cavortingcheetah makes good points about the ludicrous prices of Cape Town. I recently stayed at The Table Bay and with an 85% discount it cost R1500 (£140) a night.
Other hotels are priced way above European capitals, it's greed and it kicked off, pardon the pun, prior to the football event held last year. The prices have not gone down. To call Johannesburg a crime ridden slum, unless you are referring just to Hillbrow, is grossly unfair and I must take issue there. It certainly has crime ridden slums but it has some beautfiul suburbs which are safer than many parts of London. |
Addis Abeba/Ouagadougou/Lagos/Accra/Libreville
Decent to good hotels, based on my personal experience:
Accra - Golden Tulip Addis Abeba - Sheraton Lagos - Ikeja Sheraton Ouagadougou - Laico Libreville - Laico When given the choice, some of these towns should be avoided in the first place ...;) |
All right Capetonian, perhaps a little strong on my part but might I please subsitute perhaps the word ghetto for slum. The dogs, razor wire, armed security guards, high walls, alarm systems and the third eye between the shoulder blades probably do make some areas of Johannesburg safer than certain strangely related parts of London.
In the elder days before the coming of the Prester there used to be a great hotel in Johannesburg called the Carlton. Sol Kerzner made his debut there as a sort of strong arm fixer at a nightclub called Raffles in the hotel. Sad to relate that the place looks today as though it'd been used for tank target practice. That's perhaps why all the hotels have moved out of Johannesburg into Rosebank, Hyde Park and Sandton. |
In my experience as a general rule of thumb if there is a multi national chain hotel go for it - SA can't go too wrong in the larger cities with a lot of choices, in smaller places as it goes Africa is Africa.
Don't expect a Shereton anywhere in Africa to be like the Shereton Sydney etc but it does the job better then great considering. Just don't drink out of the taps. Most larger airports with a good RPT international operation have a decent hotel adjacent with a bar your sure to bump into someone if you've done the rounds through the place. |
Hotels
Freetown - there is only one at the airport, well down a dirt road, it's just too difficult to get to the city. The Airport Hotel is adequate has aircon in the bar and dining room and some work in the rooms (ask for the BMI crew rooms) Cold beer and some food ok. There is another being refurbed on the beach but haven't seen it yet.
Roberts Liberia - Hendeja Resort, costs a fortune but good, in fact probably the only one worth staying at considering security plus comforts and pool with the exception that some mobiles won't work, limited Wifi, nice beach with security. Ouagadougou - try Libya Hotel (ex Sofitel) very good, pool, a'con and good wifi in lobby Abuja - Agree with previous post, Transcorp Hilton is best, Sheraton is just ok |
Treat the following with caution:
The Hotel Source Du Nil, Bujumbura - still has its original 70's decor (more creepy than charming), most of the lights in our rooms (we were a crew of 8) did not function, the laundry mislaid a whole set of uniforms, the plumbing was a disgrace (think non-flushing toilets, low water pressure and no hot water) and the one working lift (out of three) was so unreliable, it had to be manned 24 hours by one of the watchmen. The restaurant issued a newly-printed menu every night with three choices of main course only. The food was fairly decent though. The Imperial Beach Resort, Entebbe - the last time I stayed there was over a year ago, so hopefully the air-conditioning now works, the hot water has been restored and the place has been fumigated for vermin. Believe me, being awoken at 2 a.m. by a gigantic rat scurrying about your room is not a pleasant experience. Nor is moving rooms so said rat can be dealt with and finding another one in your new room. Some of my colleagues complained of roaches and bedbugs in their rooms. Hotel Plein Ciel, Djibouti - The sort of establishment where the chap at the reception is smoking a cigarette and chewing a huge wad of miraa as he checks you all in. The soft-drink fridge in the bar is padlocked, and the lady who keeps the only key has an irritating tendency to go AWOL. Wireless Internet transmitters are conspicuously located in all the corridors outside the rooms, but the only place you can pick up a signal is in the lobby. And some highly recommended ones: The Birchwood (Johannesburg), Kempinski (Djibouti), Club Du Lac (Bujumbura), Airport View (Entebbe), Royal Palm (Dar), Ambassador (Hargeisa) and Intercontinental (Asmara). |
For standards The Grace in Rose Bank takes some beating. Tad expensive and an hour from JNB though.
If you fancy somewhere close to JNB but not your standard airport hotel which we all get pretty bored with try The Airport Game Lodge. 10 mins from JNB but away from the flight path. Very nice large rooms set around a garden with swimming pool. Ponds, stream, large paddock with various game. Excellent breakfast. Now the down side - no bar :eek: There is a very temperamental drinks vending machine which even the staff can't get into. No meals apart from breakfast either. However they will take you to a place 5 mins away which has a bar and excellent restaurant. Oh, also the admin is pretty haphazard. Despite all of this for a one night stop over it is now our choice. :ok: |
Misty Hills is around ten minutes or so from Lanseria and has The Carnivore restaurant down the bottom of the koppie on which it's built. Pretty nice place, specially if you're a meat eater.
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Anyone have advice for Libreville? Our crew are at the Le Meridien and not very happy there. Is the Intercontinental operating again after their refurbishment?
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Cape Town Hotels
There's a fabulous hotel about 25 mins from Cape Town International Airport called Sante Resort, Hotel & Spa, just off the N1 near Paarl and Franschhoek. Beautiful 5 star property with one of the world's best Spa's (perfect for the wife), set in the Vineyards & Olive Groves. They like airline crew & travel trade staff and have a deal on at the moment of R600.00 per room per night bed & breakfast and you get selected Spa treatments for only R299.00 if you are crew. Reservations are handled by Topplaces - [email protected]. If you want to bring friends the buddy rate is R1250.00 per room per night BB.
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West Africa
Nigeria - Lagos (Ikeja) - Sheraton
Ghana / Accra - Fiesta Royale Ghana / Accra - Golden Tulip Ghana / Accra - Labadi Beach Liberia / Monrovia - RLJ Kedeja Resort & Villas Liberia / Monrovia - Cape Hotel Liberia / Monrovia - Mamba Point Liberia / Monrovia - Royale Hotel Sierra Leone / Freetown - Cape Sierra Hotel Sierra Leone / Lungi - Lungi Airport Hotel The Gambia / Banjul - Ocean Bay Hotel |
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