In a capital most travellers treat as a one-night necessity, The Weinberg makes a quiet case for staying put. It is a forty-three-room hotel wrapped around a century-old heritage house in leafy Klein Windhoek, at the heart of the Am Weinberg Estate, a walled lifestyle precinct where restaurants, a spa and a rooftop sundowner lounge sit a few minutes' walk from your room. Run by Gondwana Collection, Namibia's largest home-grown tourism group, it is the rare Windhoek address you arrive at tired and leave faintly reluctant to.
Location
Windhoek is where most Namibian journeys begin and end, and Klein Windhoek is the version of the capital you would choose to return to: a leafy, low-rise suburb a few minutes east of the compact centre, up on the central plateau at around 1,650 metres. The Weinberg sits at the heart of the Am Weinberg Estate, a walled, self-contained precinct of restaurants, a deli and a spa gathered around the old mission house at its centre. The practical upshot is the appeal: you can land off a long flight and not need a taxi until you leave.
Be clear about what this is not. Windhoek’s headline sights, the Christuskirche, the Independence Memorial Museum and the old Alte Feste fort, are a short drive rather than a stroll, and the estate’s calm comes from its remove from the centre. In our experience that suits the people who book it: travellers wanting a calm arrival or departure, not a base for pounding the city pavements. The plateau air is dry, clear and malaria-free, a genuine reassurance before the journey north.
Rooms
Forty-three rooms across four tiers, which tells you this is a hotel built for range rather than intimacy. Most are Deluxe doubles and twins facing the planted courtyard and its fountain, the sensible choice for a night or two. A handful of Superior rooms sit a level up; above them the split-level Loft rooms add a lounge and a kitchenette, seven of them set up for families with a sleeper couch for children; and two Terrace Suites run closer to serviced apartments, with two bedrooms, a full kitchen and a private garage.
A few honest notes. The Lofts are reached by their own stairs with no lift, worth knowing if you travel with heavy cases or anyone less steady on their feet, and the step-free rooms sit among the standard categories rather than the Lofts or Suites. Rooms in the original core run snugger and darker than the courtyard label implies, so if space matters, the newer rooms are the ones we point people towards. Otherwise every room covers the essentials without fuss, which is exactly what a stopover wants.
Communal Areas
This is where The Weinberg earns its keep. The hotel’s own heart is the courtyard, planted and centred on a fountain, ringed by the heritage-house restaurant, where breakfast is served and dinner runs à la carte most evenings, and three lounges that cover most moods: a Wine Lounge, a Library Lounge for an afternoon with a book, and the rooftop Sky Lounge. The Sky Lounge is the room without a bed that everyone remembers, tapas and a drinks list as the valley goes gold below, though on winter evenings in June and July it pays to bring a layer.
Step out of the hotel and the estate proper begins, and this is the real draw: a steakhouse (Butcher Block), a seafood-and-sushi kitchen (the Cape Town Fish Market, the one our travellers come back for), an all-day brunch spot (Olivia’s Kitchen), a delicatessen for picnics, and the warm-spring-fed Life Day Spa, closed to under-thirteens. These are run as independent businesses, so book ahead; the choice on your doorstep is real, even if not all of it answers to the front desk.
Activities
The Weinberg does not run an activity programme, and does not need to: its job is to be the comfortable hinge of a Namibian trip, with a concierge to arrange the city tour, market visit or wildlife day that fills it. Otherwise the estate is the activity: a slow morning at the spa, a long lunch, an hour with a book in the Library Lounge, the Sky Lounge for the view. We rate it as a place to decompress rather than fill a diary, which, at the start or end of a big trip, is usually the point.
Bed & Breakfast
When to go
Find out when is best to visit
- Excellent
- Good
- Poor
WET SEASON
The wettest period of the year, although rainfall usually comes in the form of short-lived afternoon thunderstorms; the rest of the time it is largely sunny.
Midday temperatures are hot, with an average high 30°C/86°F midday, temperatures can occasionally rise well above this. Mornings average a pleasant 17°C/63°F.
Like the rest of Namibia, Windhoek and the surrounding areas have very distinct wet and dry seasons; rain is common, usually in the form of sharp thunderstorms from November through to early May, the rest of the year clear skies dominate.
WET SEASON
The wettest period of the year, although rainfall usually comes in the form of short-lived afternoon thunderstorms; the rest of the time it is largely sunny.
Midday temperatures are hot, with an average high 30°C/86°F midday, temperatures can occasionally rise well above this. Mornings average a pleasant 17°C/63°F.
Like the rest of Namibia, Windhoek and the surrounding areas have very distinct wet and dry seasons; rain is common, usually in the form of sharp thunderstorms from November through to early May, the rest of the year clear skies dominate.
WET SEASON
The wettest period of the year, although rainfall usually comes in the form of short-lived afternoon thunderstorms; the rest of the time it is largely sunny.
Midday temperatures are hot, with an average high 30°C/86°F midday, temperatures can occasionally rise well above this. Mornings average a pleasant 17°C/63°F.
Like the rest of Namibia, Windhoek and the surrounding areas have very distinct wet and dry seasons; rain is common, usually in the form of sharp thunderstorms from November through to early May, the rest of the year clear skies dominate.
WET SEASON
The rains begin to fade, with the likelihood of thunderstorms diminishing over the month.
Average midday temperatures are a pleasant 26°C/80°F. Mornings average a chilly 13°C/55°F
Like the rest of Namibia, Windhoek and the surrounding areas have very distinct wet and dry seasons; rain is common, usually in the form of sharp thunderstorms from November through to early May, the rest of the year clear skies dominate.
DRY SEASON
Clear skies and dry conditions dominate.
Midday temperatures are surprisingly cool, averaging around 22°C/72°F, while night temperatures average a low of 6°C/43°F making warm clothes essential for those early morning activities!
Like the rest of Namibia, Windhoek and the surrounding areas have very distinct wet and dry seasons; rain is common, usually in the form of sharp thunderstorms from November through to early May, the rest of the year clear skies dominate.
DRY SEASON
Clear skies and dry conditions dominate.
Midday temperatures are surprisingly cool, averaging around 22°C/72°F, while night temperatures average a low of 6°C/43°F making warm clothes essential for those early morning activities!
Like the rest of Namibia, Windhoek and the surrounding areas have very distinct wet and dry seasons; rain is common, usually in the form of sharp thunderstorms from November through to early May, the rest of the year clear skies dominate.
DRY SEASON
Clear skies and dry conditions dominate.
Midday temperatures are surprisingly cool, averaging around 22°C/72°F, while night temperatures average a low of 6°C/43°F making warm clothes essential for those early morning activities!
Like the rest of Namibia, Windhoek and the surrounding areas have very distinct wet and dry seasons; rain is common, usually in the form of sharp thunderstorms from November through to early May, the rest of the year clear skies dominate.
DRY SEASON
Clear skies and dry conditions dominate.
Midday temperatures are surprisingly cool, averaging around 22°C/72°F, while night temperatures average a low of 6°C/43°F making warm clothes essential for those early morning activities!
Like the rest of Namibia, Windhoek and the surrounding areas have very distinct wet and dry seasons; rain is common, usually in the form of sharp thunderstorms from November through to early May, the rest of the year clear skies dominate.
DRY SEASON
As the land continues to dry animals are drawn to the few remaining sources of water; in locations such as Etosha this can equate to some incredible game viewing. Temperatures however are quite cool, and cold in the mornings, so do pack some warm clothes! .
Namibia has an arid climate with very distinct wet and dry seasons. The wet season occurs from November through to early May, during this time, thunderstorms infrequently occur, the rest of the year is dry. Although the country can be visited throughout the year, it is generally at it's best during the peak of the dry season when day time temperatures are a little more pleasant. The dry season also improves the likelihood of good game view sightings, as wildlife concentrates itself around the few remaining water sources. There is also a lot to be said for the ‘emerald season’; a rich diversity of blooming flowers, beautiful green scenery and fantastic birding make for a wonderful and unique experience.
DRY SEASON
Clear skies and dry conditions continue to dominate.
Midday temperatures are beginning to rise in advance of the rains, averaging around 29°C /84°F by October. Night temperatures are also higher, with an average low of 16°C/60°F.
Like the rest of Namibia, Windhoek and the surrounding areas have very distinct wet and dry seasons; rain is common, usually in the form of sharp thunderstorms from November through to early May, the rest of the year clear skies dominate.
WET SEASON – ‘EMERALD SEASON’
The start of the wet season, with the occasional short sharp thunderstorm.
Like the rest of Namibia, Windhoek and the surrounding areas have very distinct wet and dry seasons; rain is common, usually in the form of sharp thunderstorms from November through to early May, the rest of the year clear skies dominate.
WET SEASON – ‘EMERALD SEASON’
The start of the wet season, with the occasional short sharp thunderstorm.
Like the rest of Namibia, Windhoek and the surrounding areas have very distinct wet and dry seasons; rain is common, usually in the form of sharp thunderstorms from November through to early May, the rest of the year clear skies dominate.
