If you’ve been looking for a reason to plan a seaside escape, this might be it. Tintswalo Summer House has officially opened its books, welcoming guests to a reimagined heritage stay in the quiet coastal pocket of Glencairn.

Image: Supplied
The opening marks the next chapter for a building with more than a century of history, now carefully revived with a distinct design identity and a focus on intimate hospitality. To understand how this transformation came together, and what sets the experience apart, we checked in ahead of its official launch.
Restored with fearless design and deep respect for its past, Tintswalo Summer House brings new life to a 120-year-old Deep South landmark. From boldly layered interiors to open-fire feasts and quietly exceptional service, this Glencairn retreat proves heritage hotels can still surprise, writes Ryan Vrede.
There’s something quietly restorative about driving into the Deep South. As a Capetonian, I’m far more likely to default to the Atlantic Seaboard when I need a change of scenery, but the journey towards Glencairn is a reminder of how gentle this side of the peninsula can be. Whether you approach via Ou Kaapse Weg or hug the coastline from Muizenberg, the pace softens, the views open up, and the city feels momentarily distant.
That sense of leaving the world behind is exactly what Tintswalo Summer House leans into — and does so with confidence.
Set in a more than 120-year-old heritage building that once operated as the Glencairn Southern Right Hotel, Summer House has been meticulously restored and reimagined as a 12-suite boutique hotel overlooking False Bay. The bones of the building are proudly intact, and it’s important to arrive with the right expectations. Floors creak gently underfoot, original window panes don’t seal with modern precision, and opening your door might require a reassuring jiggle of the key. None of this detracts. In fact, it deepens the charm. This is not a city-centre hotel masquerading as heritage; it’s the real thing, respectfully brought back to life.
The interiors are where Summer House truly asserts its personality. Designed by Camlyn Johnston — third generation of the Tintswalo family’s design lineage, following in the footsteps of her mother Lisa Goosen and grandmother Gaye Corbett — the aesthetic is bold, expressive and refreshingly fearless. This isn’t safe boutique-hotel styling. It’s maximalist, layered, and deeply personal, making you feel less like a guest passing through and more like you’re inhabiting a beautifully curated artwork.

Camlyn Johnston/Supplied
No corners have been cut. Italian fountains anchor shared spaces, chandeliers were installed at Johnston’s insistence despite early engineering hesitation, and an antique coffee table was, by her own admission, “stolen” from Gaye Corbett’s home after she decided it belonged in the lounge. These are not decorative gestures for effect; they’re decisions rooted in instinct, confidence and a clear design philosophy.

Image: Supplied

Image: Supplied
I stayed in the Thistle suite, which in true Tintswalo style was spacious, well-appointed and supremely comfortable. The travel gods were smiling: its green and purple palette happens to be a personal favourite, one I often gravitate towards in my own design work. Like all the suites, Thistle feels individual rather than templated — a recurring theme throughout the property.

The Thistle Room

The Thistle Room
Service is where Summer House quietly excels. Because of its scale, hospitality here feels personal and considered, never performative. Every interaction was warm, attentive and unforced, easily on par with some of the best hotels I’ve stayed in, but with a level of intimacy that larger properties simply can’t replicate.
The pool area is unapologetically social — made for summer afternoons that stretch longer than planned. An outdoor bar means your next cocktail is only a holla away from your sunlounger, and the heated pool makes year-round swims entirely viable. My room opened directly onto the pool deck, which allowed for an early-morning dip before breakfast — a small luxury that set the tone for the day beautifully.

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Dining at Summer House Eatery was exceptional. We opted for a family-style dinner that showcased the kitchen’s strengths: roast lamb, T-bone steak, succulent chicken, and a generous spread of fresh, seasonal vegetables designed for sharing. It’s confident, open-fire cooking without unnecessary complication. The wine list is thoughtfully curated and extensive enough to satisfy even demanding enthusiasts, with strong representation across regions and cultivars.

Image: Supplied

Image: Supplied
There’s also something pleasingly local about the adjoining Sports Bar, which retains its old-school charm and continues to draw Glencairn regulars alongside hotel guests — a reminder that this is a place stitched into its community, not sealed off from it.
Tintswalo Summer House isn’t trying to be everything to everyone. It’s a heritage home with a strong point of view, restored with care, character and conviction.
Tintswalo Summer House is set to open its doors to the public in April 2026, and my stay formed part of a media preview ahead of its official launch. If this early glimpse is anything to go by, the finished experience will be one that rewards those who appreciate character over polish and story over spectacle. In bringing a long-neglected Glencairn landmark back to life with such conviction, Tintswalo hasn’t just restored a building — it has given the Deep South a reason to linger a little longer.
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