Living in Cape Town has a way of making you complacent, writes Zoë Erasmus. The mountain becomes background noise. The ocean is something you drive past on your way to errands. You tell visitors you’ll “do that hike soon” or “finally go wine tasting one day”, and then… life happens. Traffic, deadlines, load shedding, the same coffee order on repeat.
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This is for the people who call Cape Town home but feel like they’ve somehow missed the memo. The ones who know the city by routine, not discovery. Consider this a gentle invitation to re-meet the place you live — no big plans, no tourist energy, just small shifts that make the city feel new again.
Start with the neighbourhoods you ignore
Cape Town is a city of pockets, and most of us only ever orbit two or three of them. Make a habit of choosing a neighbourhood you don’t usually go to and spending a slow morning there.
Wander through Observatory without an agenda, browse secondhand bookshops, sit in a café you’ve never tried, walk down residential streets instead of Main Road. Do the same in Wynberg Upper, Vredehoek, or Woodstock east of Albert Road, where the city feels quieter, more lived-in, less curated.
The goal isn’t to tick off hotspots, but to notice how different Cape Town feels when you’re not rushing through it.
Walk somewhere you normally drive
Cape Town reveals itself best at walking pace, yet most locals experience it from behind a steering wheel. Pick a stretch you usually drive and walk it instead.
Try the Sea Point Promenade early on a weekday morning, before it turns social. Or walk from Muizenberg to Kalk Bay, letting the change in atmosphere happen gradually. Even a slow wander through the Company’s Garden, followed by sitting on a bench and doing absolutely nothing, counts.
Walking changes scale. It turns the city from a backdrop into a place with texture — sounds, smells, pauses.
Go to the mountain, but not like a tourist
You don’t need a cable car ticket or a sunrise hike to reconnect with the mountain. In fact, the quieter routes are often the most rewarding.
Explore Newlands Forest on a misty afternoon, or take a gentle contour path on Signal Hill instead of going straight to the top. Bring a flask, sit on a rock, and let the city exist below you without needing to photograph it.
The mountain isn’t just a landmark, it’s a place to be alone with your thoughts, even in a city this busy.
Eat somewhere that’s been there forever
Cape Town’s food scene moves fast, but some places endure quietly. Seek out restaurants and cafés that locals have been going to for decades.
Order fish and chips from a takeaway near the harbour, or sit down at a family-run spot where the menu hasn’t changed in years. These places carry stories of neighbourhoods, migrations, habits passed down.
Sometimes seeing the city means tasting its memory, not its trends.
Spend a morning at a museum you’ve never entered
Many locals haven’t stepped inside Cape Town’s museums since school trips. Change that.
Visit the Iziko South African National Gallery, the Slave Lodge, or the District Six Museum on a quiet weekday. Go alone if you can. Read slowly. Let yourself feel unsettled, reflective, curious.
Understanding the city’s past, especially the parts that are uncomfortable, deepens your relationship with the present one.
Take yourself on a day off (without leaving town)
You don’t need to escape Cape Town to feel refreshed by it. Book a day off, don’t tell anyone your plans, and treat your own city like somewhere worth lingering in.
Start with coffee in a different suburb, browse a small gallery, sit by the sea with a book, end the day with a solo dinner. No rushing home. No productivity guilt.
Cape Town rewards attention. The more deliberately you move through it, the more it gives back.
Seeing the city again
You don’t have to “see everything” to feel like you know Cape Town. You just have to slow down enough to notice what’s already there.
The truth is, the city hasn’t been hiding from you, you’ve just been busy living in it. And sometimes, that’s all it takes to start seeing it properly again.
