Johannesburg Hotel Info - Provided by the
City of Johannesburg
JOHANNESBURG is where the money is. And the action. It's the most
powerful commercial centre on the African continent. It is an African
city that works: the phones dial, the lights switch on, you can drink
the water, there are multi-lane freeways, skyscrapers, conference
centres, golf courses and Johannesburg hotel options to pick and
choose from. If you should get lost, ordinary people on the
street speak English. Cellphones are everywhere. You can send e-mail
from your Johannesburg hotel room, you can bank any foreign currency, you can watch
CNN, and should you fall ill, the hospitals have world-class equipment
and doctors who can be trusted with a scalpel.
Johannesburg generates 16% of South
Africa's GDP and employs 12% of the national workforce. It has a
financial, municipal, roads and telecommunications infrastructure that
matches leading first world cities, yet the cost of living is far
lower. The World Economic Forum rates the banking sector the sixth
most sophisticated in the world.
Johannesburg hosts every form of
commercial activity from financial services to heavy industries and
mining. There's hardly a major international company doing serious
business in sub-Saharan Africa that has not looked to Johannesburg as
the gateway to the continent. Our selection of Johannesburg hotel
options will offer you grate value for money during your next business
trip to Johannesburg.
Provincial capital:
Johannesburg is the capital of South Africa's smallest - and richest -
province, called Gauteng,
a Sesotho name meaning "Place of Gold". Gauteng makes up just 1,4% of
South Africa's land area, but it is home to more than a fifth of the
population and produces a third of the country's wealth.
Gauteng
is predominantly urban, consisting chiefly of industrial and mining
satellite towns surrounding the twin cities of Johannesburg and
Pretoria. Pretoria, South Africa's administrative capital (the
legislative capital is Cape Town) is itself merging into
Johannesburg's outer suburbs, where you will also have a selection of
excellent value for money Johannesburg hotel options.
Modern city:
Johannesburg is the most densely populated and urbanised municipality
in South Africa, home to 3 225 800 people in 1 006 900 households. And
that population is growing swiftly: 218 600 households were added
between 1996 and 2001. Some 97% of households have access to piped
water (a high figure for Africa), 82% have flush toilets connected to
the municipal sewerage system, and 85% have electric lightning in
their homes.
Dry city:
Johannesburg is one of the world's few large metropolitan areas to be
based on neither an ocean port nor a major river. The sea is a six
hour drive to the east. The nearest major river. the
Vaal
River, is a two hour drive to the south. Ironically, the city is
ranked as the biggest port in southern Africa, thanks to an
export/import railway freight facility called City Deep.
High city:
Johannesburg sits on a high-altitude inland plateau 1 753 metres (6
000 feet) above sea level. This means it takes a minute longer to boil
an egg here, and visiting athletes must arrive a week early to
acclimatise. (Just ask Lennox Lewis, who lost his world heavyweight
title to the Joburg altitude.) But the air's not so thin that the
average person will notice the difference. You will not need to boil
an egg yourself if you choose one of our Johannesburg Hotel options.
Warm city:
The weather's balmy 10 months of the year, generally warm, but not as
stiflingly hot as many other African cities. Nights however, can be
chilly, particularly in winter. Seasons are the reverse of the
northern hemisphere, with summer from October to March, and winter
from June to August.
Young city:
Johannesburg is, by city standards, a mere teenager. It started life
in 1886 as a gold-rush shanty town, expected to last no more than a
decade. But the gold proved so rich that disputes flared over who
controlled Johannesburg, culminating in a war that changed military
history - the Anglo-Boer war. By the nineteen twenties, the city had
outpaced every rival to become Africa's major commercial centre.
Big
city:
Johannesburg's municipal area is BIG. It is often compared with Los
Angeles, with which it shares a similar sprawling topography, linked
by huge highway interchanges. Los Angeles covers more area, but it's a
patchwork of independent local governments. Johannesburg is a single
municipality that covers over 1 645 square kilometres. Sydney's
central municipality, by comparison, covers 1 500 square kilometres.
One recent study concluded that if a resident of the southern-most
area, Orange Farm, were to walk to the inner city, the journey would
take three days.
What does this mean for tourists?
Because there are no mountains or estuaries to block growth, the city
is a shapeless sprawl in which places of interest are often widely
separated. There is no US-style city grid, but a ring of highways does
provide some easily accessible points of reference for out-of-towners.
The dominant forms of transport are the private car and the minibus
taxi. Some 49% of road trips are made by private cars, 29% by taxis,
13% by buses.
Time zones:
South Africa's time is two hours ahead of Greenwich Mean Time.
Johannesburg shares the same time zone as Cairo, Athens and much of
Eastern Europe. When it is noon in Johannesburg, it is 2.00am in Los
Angeles, 5.00am in New York, 10.00am in London, 6.00pm in Hong Kong,
and 8.00pm in Sydney. Where is it? The precise answer is: 26° 08' S
and 28° 14' E. If that doesn't mean much to you, Johannesburg is
roughly a ten-hour flight away from most European cities, and a
14-hour flight away from the east coast of North America.
School holidays:
During school holidays, large numbers of Johannesburgers flee to
either the coast or the game parks, leaving the roads pleasantly
snarl-free. The inner provinces and coastal provinces have different
school holiday schedules, and private schools are free to choose their
own timetables. The school holidays for government schools in
Johannesburg during 2004 are 25 June to 19th July; 22 September to 4th
October; and 3 December to the second week in January.
Cheap city:
For a foreign visitor, Johannesburg is cheap. In 2002, an
international survey of 22 leading cities found that Johannesburg was
the cheapest to live in - less than half the price of London and a
quarter the price of Tokyo. Prices are no longer quite as cheap, due
to dollar weakness and the strengthening of the local currency, the
rand. But visitors from Europe and the USA can rely on a rule of thumb
that most locally produced goods will cost a little more than half
what you would have expect to pay for the equivalent back at home.
Johannesburg or Joburg?
Johannesburg is a bit of a mouthful, which is why South Africans
invariably call the city "Joburg". The shorter name is creeping
towards respectability: the municipality recently decided to use "Joburg"
on all marketing and official stationery. There was talk at one point
of giving the city an African name like Egoli, meaning "city of gold",
until that name was hijacked by the country's longest-running
television soap opera.
Languages:
Johannesburg is South Africa's most cosmopolitan city, home to diverse
population groups and to languages from throughout Africa. South
Africa itself has 11 languages, all of them spoken in Johannesburg.
But tourists will find that English is the predominant language of
government, business and the media, and can be understood by most
people. Road signs are mainly in English. South Africans speak British
as opposed to American English, but the local variety has been
influenced by African languages and some colloquialisms will require
translation. The other principal tongues spoken in Johannesburg are
the indigenous languages isiZulu, Afrikaans, Setswana and SeSotho. But
there are significant numbers of Portuguese speakers from neighbouring
Portuguese-speaking African countries, and growing numbers of
French-speakers from West and central Africa. There are also large
Asian minorities, including Indians and Chinese, who continue to speak
their home languages.
We invite you to select one of our
Johannesburg Hotel Partners for your next trip to Johannesburg.
We are a National Accredited Member of SATSA, South Africa Tourism Services Association

SATSA symbolizes Credibility, Stability and Integrity.
You can have peace of mind when SATSA approves your agent.
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Martin Oosthuizen
P.O.Box 837 - Constantia - 7848
Cape Town - South Africa
Phone: 0027 21 712 6339
contact me

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