Berea Conference Facilities - Durban - KwaZulu-Natal - South Africa
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Sica's Guest House - Berea, Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
We can accommodate 8 - 150 delegates for a conference. Conference equipment available: TV, VCR, OHP, Whiteboard & flipchart. Microphones and other projectors at an extra cost. ....... further information |
Team Building and Events Management in Berea
Teambuilding and Events Management South Africa (TBAE) specialises in interactive team building, with programs designed to promote team spirit and a participative culture. TBAE is renowned for the design and delivery of unique, innovative, fun and memorable team building programs, customised to meet each client’s individual needs, agenda and budget. Our experienced and highly skilled facilitators work in partnership with our clients to ensure continuity in existing training or development programs ...more about team building and events management in Berea
Berea Information
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The two main areas of the Berea are Musgrave and upper Glenwood which are separated by the N3 highway which leads into the city centre.
Places of interest include Musgrave Shopping Centre, Clifton School, Durban Girls' College, Durban High School and Maris Stella, Mitchell Park, the botanical gardens and the Howard College campus of the University of KwaZulu-Natal.
Some famous Durbanites who have called Berea their home include cricketer Andrew Hudson, radio personality Alan Khan, TV presenter Imraan Vagar, business legend Arnold Zillman, medical expert Dr Rahim Ballim and supermodel Georgina Grenville amongst others. The Berea borders the orange-roofed Durban suburb of Morningside.
Places of interest include Musgrave Shopping Centre, Clifton School, Durban Girls' College, Durban High School and Maris Stella, Mitchell Park, the botanical gardens and the Howard College campus of the University of KwaZulu-Natal.
Fashionable Florida Road that leads from Berea off the Ridge, south of Mitchell Park towards Windermere, is a hive of art galleries, restaurants and fashionable boutiques in a wash of colour and quasi-colonial, semi-bohemian lifestyle where, what began as a largely residential area, today is a humming commercial part of the city that deserves a visit for the restaurants, coffee shops and listed buildings. |
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