Sabi Sabi Earth Lodge: our review
Our honest take on Sabi Sabi Earth Lodge, the architecturally remarkable, art-filled camp buried in a Sabi Sand hillside.
The entrance catches you off guard. You drive through the bush expecting a gate and a reception desk, and instead you walk down into the earth. The lodge is built into a hillside, designed by Geoff Cohen, with curved walls and low organic forms that make it feel less like a hotel arrival and more like stepping into a space that was always there. By the time you reach your suite, the outside world has already receded.
Earth Lodge is one of those places we keep returning to in conversation when clients ask about architecture in the bush. Most bush camps are beautiful. This one is singular.

Where it sits
Earth Lodge is in the Sabi Sand Game Reserve, which shares an unfenced boundary with Kruger National Park in Mpumalanga. The reserve itself has been privately managed for decades, and that history shows in how the bush is maintained and how the game viewing operates. No fences between Sabi Sand and Kruger means wildlife moves freely across the entire system.
The lodge is accessible by light aircraft into Skukuza or Kruger Mpumalanga International Airport, with a road transfer from there. Johannesburg is the usual hub. It is not a difficult journey.
What makes this lodge different
The architecture is the obvious answer, but it is worth spelling out what Cohen actually did. The lodge is carved into a koppie, with suites positioned underground and semi-underground so that from certain angles the building almost disappears. Rough stone and thatched rooflines merge into the surrounding colour. The pool appears as a dark horizontal cut in the hillside.
Inside, the lodge holds a serious collection of contemporary South African art. Paintings and sculpture move through the corridors and communal spaces in a way that feels curated rather than decorative. It is not a gallery with a reception desk attached. It is a working lodge that happens to have good art, and that balance matters.
There are 13 suites. Each opens onto a private deck with a plunge pool, and the glass doors fold back to bring in the morning air and the sounds from the dry riverbed below. Stone and wood throughout, with locally sourced finishes. The interiors are dark and cool in the way of a stone building, which suits the Lowveld heat.

Game viewing in the Sabi Sand
Sabi Sand is where South Africa's leopard density is at its highest. That is not a marketing line. It reflects decades of habituated animals and strict vehicle management across the reserve. On a three-night stay at Earth Lodge, seeing leopard on most drives is a realistic expectation. We have had guests who saw leopard on every single outing.
The Big Five are all present, and game drives run morning and evening with experienced guides. Bush walks are available for those who want to cover ground on foot. The guides here are strong. They know their section of Sabi Sand in the way that comes from years on the same traversal area, and they read animal behaviour rather than just finding it.
For guests who watch birds, the reserve holds well over 300 species. The lilac-breasted roller alone is worth stopping for.
Between drives
Meals at Earth Lodge sit at the more formal end of the Sabi Sand range. Dinners are often served outside, around a fire or in the open-sided boma area, with the Lowveld dark and quiet around you. The kitchen leans on South African produce and changes the menu across your stay. Breakfasts after an early drive, with coffee and the morning light coming in, are one of the small quiet pleasures the lodge does very well.
The Amani Spa is on-site and well-regarded. It uses natural products and the treatment rooms are designed with the same earthy quiet as the rest of the lodge. If your clients have a travel day either side, the spa makes a long middle day very easy.
Who it suits
Earth Lodge works well for couples who want something visually and architecturally distinctive rather than just a comfortable camp. Art collectors and design-minded travellers come specifically for what Cohen built here. It also suits those who want real privacy: the suite footprint is generous, the plunge pool is completely private. The traversal area has the leopard density to justify the trip on wildlife grounds alone.
It is a higher price point within the Sabi Sand, and it earns that in the quality of the finish. That said, families with young children are better placed at some of the other properties we work with in the reserve. Not because of the wildlife, but because the atmosphere here skews quiet and contemplative.
If you are weighing Earth Lodge against other Sabi Sand options, or wondering how it fits into a longer South Africa itinerary, get in touch and we can talk it through. We have sent a lot of guests here and we know where it sits in the broader picture.
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