Vipingo Mosque Ruins

Historic Sites along Kenya’s Coast

Vipingo Mosque Ruins: Fairly Untravelled

There are dozens of well-studied and accessible historic sites and ruins along the coast. Some of the historic sites located here are composed of the old settlement towns and outlying groups of tombs. End to end, it is awash with a collection of varied historic sites, found mainly along the coast, many of them on private lands; consisted of ancient mosques, ruins, palaces, houses, walls with gates and tombs. Owing to their isolation and overgrown vegetation, some are hard to reach.

Among the ruins that require a strong mind to venture off the popular circuits is Vipingo Mosque Ruin. A failrly disintegrated ruin, it is located on the beach about 14 km north of Mtwapa and 3 km southeast of Kijipwa Police Station. If you get to the police station, you need to double back about 500 m. It is about 2 km from the turnoff to the ocean, across a rural country devoid of development. People are rarer here than the baobabs standing sentinel, in defiance of the balmy weather.

The route is pretty straight forward all the way to ocean. There is not much left of the Vipingo Mosque Ruin. It is set about 100 ms from the road. The qibla and west side of the north wall stands, and some of the western walls may be traced, but the eastern side of the mosque has been eroded by the sea. There’s little evidence remaining of what was possibly a wall. The roof of the Mosque supports a narrow musalla, and to the west of the scar the top of the wall falls with a sharp pitch.

This pitch continues down to the north arched doorway of the western room, and probably indicates the roof was of makuti. The wall height of the western room appears to have been no higher than the spring line of the archway; the area thus likely functioned as an open verandah. The mihrab is framed in a plain architrave, with plain jambs below offset capital of two narrow members. Little is known of its origin and founders. Vipingo is located 30 km north of Mombasa via B8 Road.


There are dozens of well-studied and accessible historic sites along the Kenya’s Coast. Some of the historic sites located here are composed of the old settlement towns and outlying groups of tombs. North to South, the coast is awash with a collection of ruins, found mainly along the beach, many of them on private lands.


Touring Kilifi County offers a delightful blend of coastal beauty, lovely beaches, cultural richness, natural wonders, and fascinating ancient ruins. Whether you’re seeking pristine beaches, historical sites, or vibrant cultural experiences – or a combination, Kilifi promises a memorable and enriching travel experience.

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What’s The Air Like In Kilifi?

For the greater part of the year, the climate along the coastal plain is pleasurable, though humid. Temperature ranges between 21C and 30C along the coast, and between 30C and 34C further inland.

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