Hotel review: Latitude 15°, Lusaka, Zambia - modern Africa in one hotel

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Hotel review: Latitude 15°, Lusaka, Zambia - modern Africa in one hotel

By Catherine Marshall
Dining spaces flow across several rooms centred on the sleek bar and spill out onto the poolside terrace.

Dining spaces flow across several rooms centred on the sleek bar and spill out onto the poolside terrace.

CHECK-IN

There are three properties in The Latitude Hotels Group at present, each named for the latitudes on which they rest: Latitude 15° in Lusaka, Zambia; Latitude 13° in Lilongwe, Malawi, and Latitude 0°, which lies on the equatorial line in the Ugandan capital, Kampala. The hotels are unified by a common design sensibility and personalised by their immediate environs; for Latitude 15° this is the leafy embassy precinct 20 minutes by car from the city and 30 minutes from Kenneth Kaunda International Airport. The location guarantees a steady stream of safari-goers, diplomatic and NGO personnel and expats and locals who favour the restaurant and bar for networking and catch-ups.

THE LOOK

The edifice is easily mistaken for a family home cushioned by lawn and foliage on a large suburban block. Contained within the plain packaging – angular white exterior, rectangular pool surrounded by bleached pavers – is a deftly controlled explosion of colour. An interior palette of neutral walls and polished concrete, wood and harlequin-tiled floors is overlaid with works by emerging African artists, bead, glass and copper chandeliers, pop art-style maps of Africa, block-printed drapes and couches scattered with beaded cushions. Remarkably, much of the sumptuous decor is fashioned from recycled objects by local communities and the Malawi-based woman's empowerment cooperative, Katundu; designer Lightfoot Zambia (whose workshop can be visited on nearby Sugarloaf Farm) assembles the disparate elements – including its own designs – into a supremely elegant, deeply sensual masterwork.

THE SUITE

This is my second stay here and my room – like all 32 suites and three kitchen-fitted family suites in the complex – is different from the last. A vast mother-of-pearl-inlaid headboard anchors a bed bedecked with faux fur cushions and fleece throw; the tactile experience extends to the turquoise velvet-upholstered couch and flokati-like rug. The bathroom feels like a private spa with its raw concrete walls, arabesque-tiled splashback and freestanding bathtub; kitenge (African fabric) bathrobes and a recycled glass shower partition are a particular delight. Utilities such as the flat screen television, bar fridge and coffee machine seem to dissolve amid the splendour.

FOOD + DRINK

Dining spaces flow across several rooms centred on the sleek bar and spill out onto the poolside terrace. Dishes reflect the multinational clientele: Korean barbecued quail, chicken and mushroom pappardelle, grilled Thai fish cakes. Hotel guests can dine at private members' club The Other Side, which also encompasses working spaces, a pool, gym and spa. Tapas, sliders and Zambian beef steaks are on the menu here.

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OUT + ABOUT

Hire a car or book a taxi or local tour for an exploration of the city's historical landmarks, galleries and markets. Namwandwe Art and Sculpture Gallery exhibits some of the country's most notable contemporary art; Kabwata Cultural Village decodes Zambian culture and craftsmanship; and Lusaka National Park and Lilayi Elephant Nursery offer a quick wildlife fix.

THE VERDICT

This is a hotel that mirrors contemporary Africa with its warmth, ingenuity and unbridled passion.

ESSENTIALS

Rooms from around $154 a night. Leopards Lane, Kabulonga, Lusaka, Zambia.

15.thelatitudehotels.com

OUR SCORE OUT OF FIVE

★★★★½

HIGHLIGHT

The staff's easy warmth and the cosmopolitan atmosphere conjured in a thoroughly African setting.

LOWLIGHT

I'd prefer to see more local dishes on the menu.

Catherine Marshall stayed at Latitude 15 as a guest of Bench Africa. See benchafrica.com

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