Chalets Accommodation Near District Six Museum
10 Chalets in District Six Museum. Enter dates to see full pricing and availability:
Hoogeland's Wood Cabins
Chalets, Self Catering in Penhill, Cape Town
Our units are designed to give you a different scenery and you will experience the 'farm life'. Our units are...
SAVE %!
R990
Hout Bay Beach Cottage
Cottages, Guest Houses, Chalets, Holiday Homes, Self Catering, Villas in Hout Bay, Cape Town
Free-standing holiday cottage in perfect location, 100 meters from the beach. Excellent security. Three bedrooms,...
SAVE %!
R2,950
Placid Pines Garden Cottage
Cottages, Chalets, Self Catering in Hout Bay, Cape Town
Placid Pines Garden Cottage is situated in a quiet fishing suburb called Hout Bay.
The unit consists of a large...
SAVE %!
R800
Zonnekus Holiday Resort
Camps, Chalets, Self Catering, Caravan Parks, Resorts in Philadelphia
We offer affordable and fun-filled days for your whole family. The resort offers plenty of accommodation options...
SAVE %!
R290
ZenCapeTown Forest Retreat
Cottages, Chalets, Holiday Homes, Self Catering, Bungalows in Hout Bay, Cape Town
Welcome to ZenCapeTown Forest Retreat!
This Cabin-in-the-woods style self-catering holiday home is truly a rare...
SAVE %!
R1,950
*All distances listed are as the crow flies, and not actual travel distances.
Nearby Attractions & Landmarks: Table Mountain, Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens, Long Street, Two Oceans Marathon, South African Museum and Planetarium, Koopmans-de Wet House, Two Oceans Aquarium, Langa Township, Heart of Cape Town Museum, Noon Gun, Lions Head, Chavonnes Battery Museum, Castle of Good Hope, Newlands Stadium, Newlands Brewery, Groot Constantia, The Company's Garden, Greenmarket Square, Holocaust Centre, Rhodes Memorial, South African National Gallery , Orange Kloof, Blue Train, Long Street Baths, Signal Hill, Whisky Live Festival, St George's Cathedral, V&A Waterfront, World of Birds
District Six Museum Reviews
More info about District Six Museum
Housed in an old church, the District Six Museum in Cape Town visually guides visitors through the early days of a resilient and cheerful area called District Six in the first half of the 20th century, to the forced removal of over 60000 people in the 1970s.
District Six is located east of Buitenkant Street, the Dutch word Buitenkant implying outside of town. In 1901, the area was considered a bubonic plague threat and the Black residents were all moved across town. Over the years it was redeveloped and although economically depressed, the Black, Indian and mixed race residents regarded it as their home. Then, between 1968 and 1983, and under the guise of a Group Areas Act, the apartheid government dismantled the buildings and shipped people out of the area into far flung suburbs. The purpose was to provide space for white families and the suburb name was changed from District Six to Zonnebloem. Strangely... Show more