A&K Sanctuary has moved and “completely redesigned” Ngorongoro Crater Camp, which now sits on a new site within Tanzania’s UNESCO-listed Ngorongoro Conservation Area.
The redesigned Ngorongoro Crater Camp’s new home is an elevated site overlooking the Serengeti Plains, 25 minutes from the crater descent road that leads to one of Africa’s most concentrated wildlife arenas.
A&K says the new position “delivers an even more immersive connection to the landscape” and was “guided by a long-term vision for responsible tourism within the Ngorongoro Conservation Area”.

Redesigned with East African studio JPN Interior Design, 97 per cent of the interiors locally made and custom-designed.
Furniture was handcrafted in Arusha workshops, with decorative elements sourced from artisans and social enterprises across the region, including fair-trade basketmaker Women Craft, which supports more than 600 Tanzanian artisans.
The single most distinctive feature is a three-metre-wide chandelier crafted from painted jacaranda seed pods, set among handwoven sisal screens made on site and sculptural wooden artworks.
Each of the 10 newly built suites has polished hardwood floors, a muslin-draped king-size bed, spacious ensuite and private viewing deck.

“The relocation of Ngorongoro Crater Camp presented an opportunity to thoughtfully reimagine the guest experience while remaining true to the essence of the destination,” says A&K Sanctuary operations senior vice president Vasco Baselli.
“From the carefully chosen setting to the craftsmanship woven throughout the camp, every decision was guided by a respect for the landscape, the local community and the enduring spirit of Ngorongoro.”
He says materials from the previous camp were repurposed where possible, existing furniture restored, and locally cut Tanga stone from northern Tanzania used throughout, with Maasai community members involved in construction.
A&K says the camp’s new setting makes it ideal for both fly-in and overland itineraries and also creates opportunities for a broader range of experiences beyond traditional crater game drives.
These include seasonal visits to the Great Migration calving grounds at Ndutu Plains, excursions to the ancient rock art site of Nasera, explorations of the Shifting Sands, visits to Olduvai Gorge Museum and encounters with local Maasai communities.

The move follows the opening of Kitirua Plains Lodge bordering Kenya’s Amboseli National Park, which welcomed its first guests in June 2026.
The lodge is in the same area where a young Geoffrey Kent (founder of A&K) took his first safaris, which became the blueprint for the brand’s luxury adventure model.
Set within a private conservancy below Mount Kilimanjaro, it sits on one of Africa’s most concentrated wildlife corridors, home to elephant herds of up to 100, lion, leopard, cheetah and more than 400 bird species.
For more information, visit A&K Sanctuary.
KARRYON UNPACKS: Relocating an established camp rather than simply refurbishing it is a notable move, and it signals where A&K Sanctuary is placing its bets: better sites, local craftsmanship as a selling point, and itineraries that reach beyond the crater rim. For advisors, the broader experience menu and the design story give them more to sell than a single iconic game drive.