
Durban’s tourism sucess story is no accident – it is the result of vision, investment and destination building
As South Africa continues to compete for tourism spend, investment and global attention, Durban is increasingly emerging as one of Africa’s most compelling coastal destinations.
According to tourism and destination development advocate Brian Mpono, the future of tourism lies not only in attracting visitors, but in creating integrated destinations that combine hospitality, lifestyle, entertainment, retail and residential experiences into a single ecosystem.
“Durban has all the ingredients required to become one of the world’s most desirable coastal destinations – climate, culture, accessibility, people and natural beauty. The opportunity lies in how we package and position those assets for both visitors and investors,” says Mpono.
Over the past decade, significant private sector investment has contributed towards reshaping Durban’s tourism landscape. Developments such as Oceans Umhlanga have demonstrated how hospitality, retail, residential living and curated lifestyle experiences can work together to create destinations that attract both local and international visitors.
Mpono believes the tourism sector should increasingly be viewed as economic infrastructure.
“Tourism is not simply about hotels and holidays. It is about jobs, investment, small business participation, aviation, property development, events, hospitality and economic inclusion. Every successful tourism destination creates opportunities far beyond its immediate footprint.”
As an executive involved in hospitality, tourism and mixed-use development, Mpono has spent years advocating for tourism-led economic growth across South Africa and the African continent. His work has focused on destination competitiveness, investment attraction and the role of public-private partnerships in creating sustainable tourism ecosystems.
Looking ahead, he believes Durban is entering a defining period in its tourism evolution.
“We have an opportunity to position Durban not only as South Africa’s playground, but as one of Africa’s premier lifestyle, tourism and investment destinations. Achieving that will require continued collaboration between government, investors, tourism authorities and the private sector.”
For Mpono, the future belongs to cities that understand that tourism is no longer a sector—it is an economic growth strategy.




