HAND-BUILT, NOT BOUGHT

The Collection

A decade of hand-building, and thirty years of collecting — this is what no other lodge in Kosi Bay can replicate.

Chalet bedroom with carved art panels Open-air cast-cement bathtub built around a living tree Lily pond and waterfall on the property Carved Central African artifact on the lodge deck

A Technique Bill Invented Himself

Every chalet at Chinderera was built by hand, over more than ten years. Along the way, Bill developed his own cast-cement technique — the source of the crocodile-hide texture you’ll find on our bathtubs and chair backs, unlike anything you’d find in a catalogue.

Trees grow straight through several of our open-air bathrooms, integrated into the structure rather than worked around. Reclaimed tree-stump sinks, driftwood furniture, thatch roofing — every surface here was a decision, not a default.

Open-air bathroom with cast-concrete tub and driftwood sink

One of our open-air, tree-integrated bathrooms

Central African carved figure and mask
Carved ceremonial wooden vessel

Thirty Years of Collecting

Scattered through the lodge is a genuinely rare collection of Central African pieces — carved figures, ceremonial vessels, beaded masks and headboards — gathered over thirty years from the Kuba, Luba, Yaka, Songye, Lega and Kota peoples. Some of these pieces carry real museum-level significance.

This isn’t decor bought to match a theme. It’s built into the furniture itself — bed headboards carved with entire village scenes, kudu-horn chairs, hand-carved calabash vessels — a living collection you sleep and bathe among, not one behind glass.

See It for Yourself