GreenHaus Suites
Off-grid bed and breakfast accommodation in Johannesburg's Parkview. Three suite types with kitchenettes, ensuite bathrooms, and workspaces. Pet-friendly with heated pool.
169 properties found · Showing 21–40
Baragwanath forms part of Soweto, South Africa's most historically significant township in southern Johannesburg. The area is home to the Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital, one of the largest hospitals in the world, and serves as an important hub within this sprawling urban community.
Off-grid bed and breakfast accommodation in Johannesburg's Parkview. Three suite types with kitchenettes, ensuite bathrooms, and workspaces. Pet-friendly with heated pool.
Recently renovated accommodation in Northcliff Hill offering a family suite and comfortable rooms, free WiFi, parking, shared dining areas, and massage services.
Themed guesthouse rooms and self-catering apartments in Northcliff. This accommodation suits leisure, business, and medical travellers, with themed rooms, family suites, and rooftop garden amenities.
Five-bedroom accommodation in Houghton Estate for up to 10 guests. All rooms feature king-size beds with ensuite bathrooms. Pool, garden, and Johannesburg skyline views. Pet-friendly.
StaySure Guesthouse in Alberton provides four ground-floor accommodation units near Johannesburg, each with private bathroom, WiFi, and kitchen facilities.
Peaceful accommodation in Northcliff offering clean rooms, warm hospitality, and convenient location near medical facilities and local attractions.
Orangerie Guesthouse offers self-catering accommodation in Northcliff, Johannesburg, with panoramic city views from private balconies and patios.
On 9th Street Boutique Guesthouse is a solar-powered accommodation in Linden, Randburg, Johannesburg offering five air-conditioned rooms with en-suite bathrooms and private kitchens.
Eight-bedroom accommodation in Quellerina, Randburg with tiered room types from Standard Queen (R649/night) to Luxury Family Suite (R1399/night), sleeping up to 16 adults.
4-star luxury guesthouse accommodation in Linden, Johannesburg, 33km from OR Tambo. Individually decorated rooms filled with collectables and original art. Rated 8.8.
Foxwood House is luxury accommodation in Houghton Estate, Johannesburg. This old manor house on a country estate offers large suites, conference facilities, and an intimate theatre. Bedrooms open onto gardens with ancient trees covering hectare grounds. Freeway provides easy access from airport.
Contemporary luxury accommodation in Observatory, Johannesburg, offering 25 en-suite rooms with swimming pools, lush gardens, and a Wellness and Spa center.
Self-catering accommodation in Randhart, Alberton, with multiple guesthouse units, pool, gardens, and braai facilities. Suitable for families, workers, and event guests.
Luxury boutique accommodation in historic Houghton, Johannesburg, with 16-17 individually themed suites. Includes complimentary breakfast, pool with eucalyptus sauna, and secure 24-hour parking.
Jimmy's Cottage is basic budget accommodation in a single 35m² unit sleeping two guests with twin beds convertible to one king bed.
Upmarket accommodation in Parkhurst, Johannesburg, with five distinct room types from ZAR 900–1,050 per night. Features outdoor pool, free Wi-Fi, and convenient access to Fourth Avenue's restaurants and boutiques.
Luxury accommodation in tree-lined Blackheath, Johannesburg, near hospitals. Offers spacious, modern rooms in a peaceful setting with heated pool and gardens.
A42 House is a micro heritage accommodation in Parktown North with four artist-curated rooms functioning as living exhibitions. Each stay supports creative conservation across Africa.
Self-catering accommodation cluster in Linden, Johannesburg, with Main House and 5 cottages for up to 26 guests. Fully furnished with orchard-inspired design and free WiFi.
Tuscany Guesthouse on Mimosa Road in Northcliff, Johannesburg, offers accommodation in Garden Rooms and Family Rooms, with a pool, serene gardens, and breakfast in the dining area.
169 properties found · Showing 21–40
Baragwanath forms part of Soweto, South Africa's most historically significant township in southern Johannesburg. The area is home to the Chris Hani Baragwanath Academic Hospital, one of the largest hospitals in the world, and serves as an important hub within this sprawling urban community.
Baragwanath has 21 properties available, with nightly rates running from R950 to R2,120 and an overall average of R1,443. The options skew toward family-run establishments rather than chain hotels, which reflects the residential character of the area.
At the budget end, self-catering accommodation gives long-stay visitors, medical students on placement, and travelling healthcare workers the flexibility of a kitchen and an independent schedule. These properties typically sit around R1,320 per night and suit those who need to manage irregular hours or extended stays without relying on a host's kitchen schedule. Bed and breakfast properties at this level offer home-cooked meals and a more personal arrangement.
The mid-range is where most of the choice sits. Guesthouses make up the largest share of listings across the market, with both "guest house" and "guesthouse" designations appearing, a distinction that reflects registration rather than any meaningful difference in experience. Rooms are typically clean and functional, with on-site parking and straightforward service. Bed and breakfast properties average around R1,771 and usually include breakfast in the quoted rate. Lodges and apartments round out this tier, offering slightly more independence than a guesthouse.
At the upper end, boutique hotels average R2,165 per night and offer noticeably more in terms of facilities, including private bathrooms, secure parking, and often a small pool or garden. Guest houses operating at this level, with averages just under R2,000, tend to combine professional management with a locally owned character. For visitors attending conferences or working with institutions affiliated with the hospital precinct, these properties balance comfort with genuine proximity to the area's core activity.
Baragwanath sits within the Soweto region, and the most significant attractions are tied to the township's political history and everyday urban culture.
The Hector Pieterson Museum and Memorial in Orlando West documents the 1976 student uprising through photographs, first-hand testimonies, and archival footage. The museum is compact but dense with material, and most visitors spend two to three hours working through it. The adjacent memorial marks the spot where Hector Pieterson was shot during the uprising. Vilakazi Street, a short walk away in the same suburb, is the only street known to have been home to two Nobel Peace Prize laureates. Both Nelson Mandela and Archbishop Desmond Tutu lived here, and the former Mandela family home is now a museum open to visitors.
Regina Mundi Church served as a gathering place and sanctuary during the anti-apartheid struggle. South Africa's largest Catholic church, it still holds bullet marks from confrontations between protesters and security forces. The interior is striking and the church is open outside of service times to those who want to see it.
Golf is accessible within the wider Baragwanath area, with courses in the southern Johannesburg corridor reachable in under 30 minutes by car. The highveld terrain keeps the courses open and flat, and tee times are generally available outside school holidays.
Street markets and informal traders operate throughout the residential areas on most days, selling local food, secondhand goods, and crafts. For first-time visitors, a guided township tour provides historical context and introduces areas that are harder to navigate independently.
Gauteng sits at approximately 1,700 metres above sea level, which keeps summer temperatures moderate and produces sharp, cold winters.
The dry season runs from May through August. Days are clear and mild, typically 14 to 18 degrees Celsius, while nights can drop toward freezing, particularly in June and July. Rain is rare during this period and the air quality is good. Outdoor sightseeing is most comfortable in these months, and many international visitors plan around this window. Accommodation availability can tighten during the June and July school holidays.
Summer runs from October through April. Afternoon thunderstorms arrive most days from November onwards, usually building after midday and clearing within an hour. Morning temperatures are warm and the highveld landscape greens up noticeably. The storms rarely disrupt travel plans seriously, but outdoor activities are best scheduled for mornings. Humidity stays low even in summer, which makes the heat manageable.
The hospital precinct generates year-round demand, which means visitor numbers do not follow the typical seasonal curve seen in leisure destinations. January and July see spikes as new cohorts of students and professionals arrive on placement.
O.R. Tambo International Airport is the main point of entry for the Johannesburg region. From the airport, Baragwanath is roughly 40 kilometres via the N12 highway, a drive of 40 to 60 minutes depending on traffic. The N12 is the most direct route connecting the airport corridor with the Soweto area.
From central Johannesburg, the distance is approximately 25 kilometres to the southwest. The N1/N12 interchange provides a straightforward route and the drive takes around 30 minutes in light traffic. The R558 offers an alternative surface road approach through the southern suburbs for those coming from that direction.
Public transport options include the Rea Vaya Bus Rapid Transit system, which operates along dedicated corridors between Soweto and the Johannesburg city centre. The BRT is reliable and affordable for visitors without a vehicle. Minibus taxis cover the residential zones and connect to the hospital precinct and nearby shopping areas, though using them comfortably requires some familiarity with the routes. Metered taxis and ride-hailing apps including Uber and Bolt operate across the area and are straightforward for airport transfers or longer journeys. Car hire is available at O.R. Tambo through all major providers and offers the most flexibility for exploring the wider region.
The districts within 10 kilometres of Baragwanath cover a range of urban environments, each with a different character and practical use for visitors.
Glenvista, 7 kilometres to the south, is an established residential suburb with a quieter atmosphere than the surrounding townships. It suits visitors who prefer a conventional suburban setting while remaining close to the Soweto area and offers convenient access to the southern Johannesburg road network.
Johannesburg South, 8 kilometres away, is a broad designation covering several southern suburbs and light industrial zones. Shopping centres, wholesale markets, and hardware precincts dominate the area. It is practical for supplies and errands rather than tourism.
Eldoradopark, 9 kilometres out, was established under apartheid to house Coloured communities, and carries a distinct identity separate from both white suburbs and black townships. The area is less documented in mainstream tourism material but represents an important part of Johannesburg's layered demographic history. Community-based visitor initiatives are slowly developing here.
Johannesburg, 10 kilometres northeast, provides access to the full range of a major city. The Apartheid Museum at Gold Reef City, the Constitutional Court in Braamfontein, the Maboneng Precinct, and Newtown's arts district are all reachable as day trips. The road connection is direct and the drive is manageable outside peak hours.
Parktown, also 10 kilometres away, is one of Johannesburg's oldest residential suburbs and contains heritage-listed homes from the early 20th century. The University of the Witwatersrand's main campus sits nearby, as do several research hospitals and academic institutions, making it a frequent destination for those working in the health and education sectors.
Melville, 10 kilometres to the north, has the most relaxed atmosphere of any area in this radius. Seventh Street is the commercial strip, with independent coffee shops, restaurants, secondhand bookshops, and small galleries. It works well as an evening destination or a slow-paced afternoon away from the hospital precinct.
Booking in advance matters more here than in standard tourist destinations. The hospital precinct creates steady year-round demand, and properties fill quickly at the start of each academic semester, particularly in January and July. Three to four weeks lead time is sensible at any point; during intake periods, six to eight weeks is safer.
When reviewing properties, check whether breakfast is included in the quoted rate. Some guesthouses bundle it automatically while others charge separately, and this makes a material difference to the daily budget for longer stays. For visits of more than three nights, self-catering arrangements often provide more flexibility, particularly for guests with early morning or late-night commitments.
Confirm off-street parking before booking if you are bringing a vehicle. Availability varies significantly between properties and the information is not always clear in listings. Ask about load-shedding backup as well. Power outages remain a regular feature across South Africa, and a property with a generator or battery inverter will maintain consistent lighting, Wi-Fi, and hot water when the grid cuts out.
Smaller guesthouses typically have hosts with useful local knowledge. They can advise on transport options, safe walking routes, and reliable places to eat nearby. This kind of practical guidance is often worth more than any formal amenity the property advertises.