African Village Is Reimagining Pan African Luxury in Addis Ababa
African Village Is Reimagining Pan African Luxury in Addis Ababa
High above the skyline of Addis Ababa, a new kind of gathering space is emerging.
African Village is not simply a resort. It is a Pan African cultural and hospitality platform designed to celebrate intra African unity through experience. In a city that houses the headquarters of the African Union, this destination feels intentional. Symbolic. Timely.
It is where culture, diplomacy, creativity, and commerce meet.
The property features 54 presidential suites designed for dignitaries, founders, artists, and global travelers who move with purpose. Two signature restaurants anchor the culinary experience, while the lobby bar becomes a natural meeting point for conversation and collaboration.
The spa offers a full ritual of restoration including hammam, massage therapy, reflexology, manicure, pedicure, sauna, steam, and a skylit swimming pool that feels both grounding and expansive.
A man made waterfall sculpted in the shape of the African continent stands as a bold centerpiece. Panoramic views stretch across Addis Ababa. Premium conference facilities, named after founders of the African Union, position African Village as one of Ethiopia’s leading meeting and wedding destinations.
This is luxury rooted in identity.

The Country Takeover Era
What sets African Village apart is its Country Takeover concept.
Nations such as Kenya and South Africa activate the space through curated experiences that feel immersive and intentional. Dedicated country rooms. Celebrated chefs from across the continent. Cultural programming that honors heritage while embracing modernity. Business networking that sparks new partnerships.
It is not tourism. It is intra African exchange in motion.
It is the diaspora reconnecting. Founders building. Creatives collaborating. Leaders convening.
African Village is shaping how Africa gathers.
The Next Chapter
Phase Two expands the vision with the development of an Africa Sculpture Park and a 100 room hotel apartment complex designed to deepen the ecosystem.
This is not just a property.
It is infrastructure for culture.


