Destinations · 7 min read

A Weekend in Nairobi: 48 Hours, Done Right

Wildlife at dawn, rooftop dinners at dusk — how to make the most of a short city break.

← Back to Journal
· 7 min read

Two days is not long for a city this size. But Nairobi has an unusual gift: genuine wilderness sits at its edge, fifteen minutes from the office towers. A well-planned weekend here can hold both.

Friday Evening — Arrive and Slow Down

Land, drop your bags, resist the urge to do anything ambitious. Nairobi sits at roughly 1,795 metres; the altitude is mild but real, and most people feel it on the first evening. Eat somewhere close to where you're staying. Sleep early — tomorrow starts before dawn.

Saturday

6:30am — The National Park

Nairobi National Park is the only national park within a capital city anywhere in the world. Go at opening. The light is better, the animals are active, and you will be back in town by mid-morning. Rhino, giraffe, buffalo and lion all live here, with the city skyline behind them — an image that never quite stops being strange.

11:00am — Coffee and the Museum

Kenya grows extraordinary coffee and, until recently, exported nearly all of it. That has changed. Find a proper café in Westlands or Kilimani and drink something local. Afterwards, the Nairobi National Museum offers an efficient and genuinely good introduction to the country's history and ecology.

2:00pm — Karen

Head out to Karen for the afternoon. The Karen Blixen Museum sits in the farmhouse of Out of Africa fame. Nearby, the Giraffe Centre lets you meet the Rothschild's giraffe at eye level from a raised platform. Both are unhurried, both are worth it.

7:30pm — Dinner

Nairobi's dining has improved dramatically in the last decade. There is excellent Indian food, a serious Ethiopian scene, and a handful of ambitious modern Kenyan kitchens. Book ahead on a Saturday.

Sunday

9:00am — Market Morning

Depending on the weekend, the city's craft and farmers' markets rotate across different neighbourhoods. Ask your concierge which is running. Go for the produce and the textiles; stay for the conversation.

1:00pm — A Long Lunch

Somewhere with a garden. Nairobi's climate — warm days, cool evenings, almost no humidity — makes outdoor lunch the correct decision nearly year-round.

4:00pm — The Elephant Orphanage or a Quiet Afternoon

The Sheldrick Wildlife Trust runs limited public visiting hours and requires booking. If you missed the window, don't force the day. A slow afternoon on a balcony is a legitimate use of a weekend.

What to Skip

Do not attempt the Maasai Mara in a weekend. It is a five-hour drive or a short flight, and it deserves three days minimum. Save it. Come back.

Nairobi is a city that improves with a second visit. Plan accordingly.

Our residences sit within easy reach of everything above. Tell our concierge what you'd like to do and we'll handle the bookings and the driver.

Stay With Us in Nairobi

Fully-furnished residences in the city's finest neighbourhoods. Book direct for the best rate.

Explore Apartments
Keep Reading

More from the Journal