The V&A Waterfront is located within the breathtaking setting of a dynamic working harbor and includes over 450 stores, more than 80 restaurants, coffee shops, pubs and take-aways, an aquarium, boat and helicopter charters, art and craft markets, a variety of leisure attractions as well as a choice of world-class conference and hotel facilities.
The V&A Waterfront offers a range of cultural landmarks including museums, historic buildings and exclusive access to one of South Africa’s essential heritage sites: Robben Island. All of this, coupled with ongoing events and entertainment, within a vibrant cosmopolitan atmosphere, ensures that the V&A Waterfront is the heart of your visit.
Visit the V&A Waterfront website and check out the monthly events calendar.
Cape Town is famous for its antiques - from art nouveau jewellery to rare books and precious objects - which can be ferreted out in the stalls along Church Street, or behind the aged shop fronts of the Victorian buildings lining Long Street and its environs. A block or two further on, the dazzling colours, textures, smells and sounds of Greenmarket Square, the city's favourite flea market, ensnare all who have saved enough energy and money to get this far.
If it is local curios you are after, Cape Town’s city centre is alive with informal markets and pavement traders, selling a vast array of bargain items, original curios and collectables, clothes and food. The sound of djembe drumming or children singing often sneaks between the modern blocks, putting a human face on the stone and concrete.
Shopping in the city is essentially on foot, but if you don't have a car at your disposal, getting to any of the malls or larger centres is as easy as hopping onto a taxi, bus or train.
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