Viceroy Hotels & Residences has extended its global portfolio into Southern Africa with the launch of three luxury safari lodges in Zambia and Botswana. This strategic expansion, announced in New York, marks a nuanced recalibration of high-end tourism by situating immersive, locally grounded travel at the heart of its offering.
The newly inaugurated properties include Thorntree River Lodge in Mosi oa Tunya National Park near Victoria Falls, Lolebezi in Lower Zambezi National Park and Atzaró Okavango Camp in the Okavango Delta. Operated in partnership with African Bush Camps, an organisation founded and led by Zimbabwean conservationist and safari guide Beks Ndlovu, these lodges are not merely architectural imprints on pristine terrain. Rather, they are intended as interconnected spaces of ecological stewardship, community involvement and cultural storytelling.
At the centre of the initiative is a reimagining of what it means to engage with African wilderness. Thorntree River Lodge offers an immediate proximity to the Zambezi River, with guided excursions to Victoria Falls, on-foot rhino tracking and river safaris that aim to recalibrate guests’ relationship with the environment. With only eight luxury suites and two family units, each featuring private plunge pools and uninterrupted riverfront views, the property balances intimacy with sustainable scale.
Lolebezi, situated within five hectares of protected land along the Lower Zambezi, places emphasis on minimal ecological impact while enhancing local cultural immersion. With just six accommodation units, including a family suite and an exclusive-use villa, the property offers air-conditioned comfort amid raw wilderness. Walking safaris, canoeing and boat expeditions are key to experiencing the terrain, home to elephants, leopards and over 400 bird species endemic to the region. The design prioritises open spaces and cultural sensitivity, incorporating elements that honour traditional architectural forms without imposing a singular aesthetic.

In Botswana’s Okavango Delta, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, Atzaró Okavango Camp offers a distinct counterpoint to the typical lodge narrative. Here, mokoro journeys along ancient floodplains, day and night game drives and walking safaris provide authentic access to one of Africa’s richest biodiversity corridors. The camp’s design foregrounds eco-consciousness with the integration of solar power, sustainable materials and elevated platforms that reduce ground disturbance. Eight luxury suites and a family villa feature air-conditioning, private pools and open viewing decks, establishing a sanctuary that respects the fragility and grandeur of the delta.
The involvement of African Bush Camps is instrumental in this venture. Established in 2006, the company has long positioned itself as an advocate for community-led development and wildlife preservation. Through its African Bush Camps Foundation, it supports education, healthcare and conservation programmes in regions surrounding its lodges. Its ethos challenges the commodification of African landscapes by foregrounding lived experiences, local agency and long-term ecological thinking.
Arash Azarbarzin, CEO of Viceroy Hotels & Residences, remarked that the African lodges are intended as immersive gateways into regional cultures, landscapes and histories. His vision aligns with a growing sentiment within responsible tourism that sees luxury not as detachment from place but as deeper connection to it. This repositioning of hospitality, shaped through dialogue with local partners and environments, reflects a wider movement in global travel toward ethical immersion and reciprocal value.

With an established presence in destinations such as Los Cabos, Snowmass, Riviera Maya and the Algarve, Viceroy’s arrival in Africa is less an imposition and more a redirection. Unlike previous models of expansion that framed Africa as a backdrop to imported luxury, this initiative attempts to recentre the continent as the narrative itself. Rather than extractive tourism, the lodges are poised to operate within local economies, elevate community voices and invest in enduring partnerships that benefit both people and ecosystems.
The broader significance of these lodges cannot be overstated. In a global tourism economy often defined by monocultural assumptions and consumption-driven models, the entry of a major hospitality group into the African eco-luxury sector presents an opportunity to question, reflect and rebuild. What does it mean to travel meaningfully in Africa today? How can conservation, heritage and hospitality coalesce in ways that are mutually enriching? And most importantly, whose stories are being told and who is empowered to tell them?
By embracing a narrative that is rooted in local knowledge systems, biodiversity respect and co-created experience, Viceroy Hotels has the potential to reshape not just its own brand but also global perceptions of African travel. This expansion is not simply about luxury lodges. It is about laying new foundations for dialogue, dignity and destination stewardship in a region whose richness transcends wildlife to encompass its people, cultures and futures.







