Here are but some of the answers to the question "Where could I visit at the Coast?"

They are situated along Moi avenue in the port city of Mombasa. They commemorate the visit of Queen Elizabeth the Second to the town in the year 1952. They are quite an artful masterpiece of art and provide a lovely backdrop for photographs, and are the main landmark in the century old city.

Situated nere the picturesque tusks is the Mombasa old town. It is quite adorned with lovely curios and islamic style architectural buildings. It is through a walk along these streets that takes you long in to the past centuries.

An arhitectural marvel fort built by the Portugese in the 16th century around 1593, overlooking the Indian ocean. It was built by an Italian architect, Jao Batista Cairato. It served the colonial portugese regime as a "holding pen" for slaves during the ancient slave trade. The Kenyan goverment first used it as a prison until it was declared a national monument.
It now serves as a museum exhibiting the coastal culture with some lovely archeological and historical excavations, and definitaly makes a good tour spot.

Haller park was what was lrft of a limestone mine, that was later rehabilitated by Bamburi cement company, to its current state of a nature park. It has a number of hippos and birds, it is home to the famous two of "mzee and Owen" a tortoise and hippo respectively that had a unique relation. It is a sure wonderful destination.

The Bombolulu workshops are located along the north coast of Mombasa. Founded in 1969, these workshops are a project of the Association for the Physically Disabled in Kenya (APDK). It is a major tourist attraction, which consists of a cultural center with 8 traditional homesteads. The center also runs a traditional restaurant and entertains guests with traditional dances throughout the day. The center employs 150 disabled craftsmen/women, who produce jewelry, handprinted textiles, wood carvings and leather crafts. The products are sold in a large showroom and exported to 20 countries. Bombolulu workshops have grown to be one of the biggest rehabilitation centers in Kenya and have built a reputation as one of Kenya’s most reliable exporters.

North of the city centre on the way to Nyali is Mamba Village, East Africa’s largest crocodile farm, offering tours which provide insight into the behaviour and life cycle of these archaic reptiles, and which are concluded with a rather graphic feeding frenzy. Also of interest to nature lovers is the Bamburi Nature Trail, home to an enormous assortment of exotic flora and wildlife. On the northern coast of Mombasa, towards the town of Malindi, the Gedi Ruins are the remains of a compelling collection of Swahili rock structures dating from the 15th century.