Post-COVID-19: Crises and Recovery of Durban Hotels, South Africa
Sai-Risha Gareeb,
Erica Sao Joao and
Anisah Deen
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Sai-Risha Gareeb: Durban University of Technology, Department of Hospitality & Tourism
Erica Sao Joao: University of Johannesburg, School of Tourism and Hospitality
Anisah Deen: UNISA, Department of Life & Consumer Sciences Florida campus
Chapter Chapter 3 in Resilience in the Hospitality and Travel Industry in Africa, 2026, pp 31-49 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract Before COVID-19, tourism and hospitality flourished within Durban. Post-COVID-19, the demand and popularity of Durban hotels have diminished, placing hotels in grim economic conditions. This study examines the critical factors affecting Durban hotels, identifies strategies that enhanced resilience in response to the pandemic, and recommendations toward strengthening hotel resilience. The study was an in-depth qualitative exploratory design using non-probability; purposeful and convenience sampling, in the form of semi-structured interviews with hotel managers in 3- and 4-star hotels along the central Durban coastline. The study findings emphasize the distinct crises post-COVID-19 such as infrastructure deterioration, load-shedding, crime, beach closures, floods, and looting causing instability. Ultimately, hotels were directly impacted financially and operationally. Their consequent actions resulted in strategies that enhanced hotel resilience like minimising expenditure, collaborative partnerships, use of industry associations, and repositioning the hotel which could be used in policy-making and contingency planning. The study provides insight into the challenges faced by Durban hotels and solutions that could be applied locally and abroad.
Keywords: Crises; Durban hotels; Post-COVID-19; Recovery strategies; Resilience (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-981-95-3210-0_3
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DOI: 10.1007/978-981-95-3210-0_3
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