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Johannesburg travel info
This cosmopolitan city has much to offer the businessman and
tourist alike, with accommodation, a service industry and
infrastructure comparable to any large city around the world. The
history of Johannesburg dates to 1886 when gold was first discovered
by the penniless prospector named George Harrison, together with his
friend George Walker, who literally stumbled onto the Witwatersrand's
reef, the world's richest natural treasure-house. Gold diggers and
fortune hunters soon arrived in droves.
Tours available in Jo'burg offer a look into a bygone era with guided
trips to Gold Reef City, an imaginative reconstruction of pioneer
Johannesburg. There are also a large variety things to do and see in
Johannesburg - museums, theatres, restaurants and world class shopping
centres. Johannesburg is at the centre of the country's communications
network and offers visitors immediate access to major tourist
attractions.
The northern suburbs are known as the shopping Mecca, with malls such
as Sandton City, Hyde Park and Rosebank, to mention a few, offering
even the most avid of shoppers anything he or she may desire. The
suburban nightspots are buzzing every night of the week. Not to be
missed is Rockey Street, alive with street cafes, artists and
musicians. Old Melville, the so-called artist's area, is abuzz day and
night with its variety of restaurants. More recently the typical
African shebeen has sprung up everywhere, giving the visitor a true
taste of African nightlife and cuisine. The man-made Randburg
Waterfront in the northern suburbs and Bruma Lake in the eastern
suburbs offer city dwellers their very own "dockside" entertainment
area with an endless range of restaurants, pubs and nightclubs. |