Business info & Contacts
The Karura Forest Reserve is an urban upland forest on the outskirts of Nairobi, the capital of Kenya. This remarkable geographical location and natural resource is one of the largest gazetted forests in the world fully within a city limits. It covers an area of about 1,000 ha (2,500 ac) and today is a a shining example of how country-based corporate social responsibility and individual philanthropy can serve to secure and protect a country’s natural resources.
The forest offers eco-friendly opportunities for Kenyans and visitors to enjoy a leafy green respite from the hustle and bustle of the city to walk, to jog, or simply to sit quietly and experience the serenity of nature in all its diversity.
Historical Sites & Areas of Special Interest
The forest has:
a 15-metre waterfall,
archaeological sites (recently excavated, artifacts being analyzed),
an old chimney incinerator – used by the Central Bank for the burning of decommissioned currency up until the mid-1990′s,
an abandoned stone quarry pond, now called Lily Lake,
caves which are considered to be sacred by many and steeped in Kenyan history (they were formerly used by the Mau-Mau freedom fighters as hideouts during the struggle for Independence),
patches of bamboo,
marshlands that attract bird life including winter migrants from Europe and Asia,
serene groves of secondary and primary indigenous trees.
The forest is also where Professor Wangari Maathai (late leader of the Green Belt Movement and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate) carried out a much publicized campaign for saving the forest from developers who tried to grab large portions of the north of the central section of the forest. The forest became a symbol of the fight against land grabbing in Kenya.
Contact us
020 2020285
0728 501944
Business Location
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005, Karen, Nairobi, Kenya
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