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Harfield Village's two-bedroom offering serves the community that drives Cape Town's accommodation economy beyond tourists—the work-relocation families, the contractors staying months while their project runs, the visiting medical specialists, the people selling a house and renting temporarily. Short-term rentals through Airbnb have transformed the guest-house sector, but they've also created demand for places that feel like a home base, not a hotel room. Harfield's residential suburb location appeals to people who need stability and space, not the buzz of the city centre. These guests want somewhere their kids can run around, a proper kitchen for cooking, and neighbours who feel normal, not transient. That's fundamentally different from the tourist market—it's about belonging somewhere temporarily while life sorts itself out.
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In Cape Town, guest houses in Sea Point and Green Point offer City Bowl proximity with better value than equivalent-quality Atlantic Seaboard properties, and both areas have strong walkability and safety. The December–January peak inflates prices sharply — the same property can cost three times more in January than in June. For visitors attending events at the Cape Town Convention Centre or the V&A, De Waterkant guest houses minimise transport time significantly.