


DEAT is the national governmental department responsible for the quality and promotion of conservation and tourism in South Africa.
The development of the Hoerikwaggo™ Trails has been made possible by a R35 million Expanded Public Works grant given to the Table Mountain National Park by DEAT.
The vision and mission of the department are as follows:
The Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism's vision is: A prosperous and equitable society living in harmony with our resources.
For more information please visit: www.environment.gov.za
The City of Cape Town is one of Table Mountain National Park’s most significant partners. Together the Park and the City are responsible for the administration of the entire Cape Peninsula. To this end the Park and the City meet on a regular basis to discuss matter of mutual concern such as visitor experience and tourism infrastructure. The City is also one of the TMNP’s major funders and has contributed significantly to the development of the Hoerikwaggo Trails.
For more information please visit: www.capetown.gov.za
The South African Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) has assisted the Table Mountain National Park by generously agreeing to allow the Table Mountain Trail to finish in the Kirstenbosch Botanical Garden. Founded in 1913 the 36-hectare Kirstenbosch Gardens grow only indigenous plants and are gloriously situated on the eastern slopes of Table Mountain.
The Garden also bears the unique distinction of being the only cultivated garden in the world to be proclaimed a Natural World Heritage Site. In 2004 the Cape Floristic Region (CFR) was declared a Natural World Heritage Gite, it was a serial nomination comprising seven CapeNature reserves, Table Mountain National Park and Kirstenbosch National Botanical Gardens .
For more information visit: www.sanbi.org.za
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