Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±

Prestwich Memorial Garden

Cape Town


Along the Walk of Remembrance (formerly known as the 2010 World Cup's Fan Walk) is this attractive public space dotted with a collection of quirky sculptures and installations by Capetonian artists, including the rainbow arch It’s Beautiful Here by Heath Nash, the Full Cycle Tree by KEAG and several Rock Girl benches.

Look down to see the outline of tram tracks: horse-drawn trams once ran past here, along Somerset and down through Sea Point to terminate in Camps Bay.


Contact

Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±'s must-see attractions

Nearby Cape Town attractions

1. Prestwich Memorial

0.03 MILES

Construction in 2003 along nearby Prestwich St unearthed many skeletons. These were the unmarked graves of slaves and others executed by the Dutch in the…

2. Evangelical Lutheran Church

0.08 MILES

Converted from a barn in 1780, the first Lutheran church in the Cape has a carved wood pulpit that's a masterwork by the German sculptor Anton Anreith. A…

3. Youngblood Africa

0.16 MILES

The artworks of young South Africans are displayed in this impressive multilevel gallery space and creative studio, where you'll also find the Food Lab…

4. Heritage Square

0.19 MILES

This beautiful collection of Cape Georgian and Victorian buildings was saved from the wrecking ball in 1996. As well as a hotel and several cafes and…

5. Museum of Gems & Jewellery

0.21 MILES

A chance to see inside the mid-18th century Huguenot House, mainly occupied by the diamond merchants and jewellers Prins & Prins. There's no pressure to…

6. Koopmans-de Wet House

0.23 MILES

Step back two centuries from 21st-century Cape Town when you enter this classic example of a Cape Dutch town house, furnished with 18th- and early-19th…

7. SA Mission Museum

0.23 MILES

The South African Missionary Society was founded by Reverend Vos in 1799 with the aim of converting slaves to Christianity. This church, dating from 1804,…

8. Mythological Landscape

0.25 MILES

This tree-like bronze and corten steel sculpture by John Skotnes is situated in a corner of Thibault Square.