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CAPE TOWN - The laughter of children echoed against walls lined with dozens of mattresses in a large, dim room of an illegally occupied building in Cape Town's bustling and touristy city centre.
A girl was having her hair braided on a stool near neatly placed plastic bags holding the belongings of people who had moved into the abandoned building from across the city.
The property is in the heart of Cape Town, where rental prices are soaring as tourism is booming.
"My income doesn't allow me to pay Cape Town's exorbitant rent prices," said one of the residents, Fundisa Loza, 46.
She moved in with her two daughters, aged 12 and 18, to be near her night-shift work at a call centre in the central business district, about a 20-minute walk away.
Accommodation in the area is listed as starting at around 10,000 rand (nearly $600) a month for a one-room flat, unaffordable on Loza's monthly salary of 8,400 rand.
Airbnbs nearby, many around the popular District Six Museum dealing with the apartheid-era forced removals of non-white communities to remote and underdeveloped townships, average around 1,500 rand a night.
"It's extreme," Loza told AFP.
Nestled between spectacular mountains and the Atlantic Ocean, Cape Town is a growing tourism destination, topping the Telegraph and Time Out magazine's 2025 rankings of best cities in the world.
It has more short-term rental units than bigger cities such as Barcelona and Berlin, which see up to five times more visitors per year, said Jens Horber from the housing activism group, Ndifuna Ukwazi.
Airbnb boom
In touristy locations like the city centre and the Atlantic seafront, Airbnb listings have increased by 190 percent since 2022, Horber said.
"Long-term rental units have been converted into tourist accommodation, removing units from the housing supply, raising rental costs and pushing out locals from neighbourhoods where they can no longer afford to live," he said.
The growth of offers for tourists and "digital nomads", including in areas where many locals have jobs, has stirred anger and resentment.
A woman eats her lunch on a couch in one of the halls of an occupied building in downtown Cape Town.