The View From Your Window Contest: Winner #23

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A reader writes:

What a beautiful setting!  This is too dry and scrubby to be tropical, so most Pacific islands are out.  I see roof water tanks and clotheslines, indicating it’s not a particularly affluent location.  I think those are crop tarps in the background, but I can’t be sure, and even if so, I have no idea what they might be growing. Overall, I’m thinking Baja.  Loreto, perhaps?

Another writes:

The first thing that struck me was obviously the desert coastal environment. What appears to be a newish Ford pickup would seem to put it somewhere in North America. And the general view and topography reminded me a lot of the area around Cabo San Lucas, where we had a not-so-pleasant vacation way back in 2004. Also, the nearness of the mountain range across the water would have to be some sort of bay or island, as the Gulf of California is way too wide to be that visible from the opposite shore.

So a bit of Google Earthing led me to the area east of La Paz, where there’s some lightly developed vacation areas, looking across the water to Isla Cerralvo. There’s a lot of options along that short stretch of coast, but it appears that the most developed is La Ventana, so I’ll go with that as my final answer.

Another:

When I stayed in La Ventana, I slept in a tent in a hurricane-washed-out arroyo (nowhere near as nice as this cute little porch), but the island across the water looks to be the same one toward which I headed out on countless tacks while windsurfing in winter 2007-08.

Another:

I have no idea where it is, but I want to move there.

Another:

My initial reaction was it had to be Baja California. But I have not been there for over 40 years, so I cannot locate the specific site the photo was taken. It brings back many memories of my late father, who dove in this area for a month at a time on several occasions in the late 1950s with two diving friends from San Diego. Back when scuba diving was in its infancy, he and his “Bottom Scratcher” friends developed their own regulators, compressors, diving equipment and spear guns to enter this amazing underwater world. He died while scuba diving with me near La Paz in August of 1959, doing what he loved to do the most.

Another:

Screen shot 2010-11-09 at 12.05.10 PM This looks to me like a view of Isla Danzante in the Sea of Cortez as seen from Danzante, Baja California Sur, Mexico. On the back side of that island feed are waters that blue and other whales migrate to in the winter. We spent a week there one winter, and traveled by small fishing boat (panga) to the back side of that pictured island every day to see the largest Screen shot 2010-11-09 at 12.04.35 PMvertebrates that have ever existed. On our first boat outing, we were disappointed because we could not find any of them after searching for hours. Then we found out why – a pod a blue whale predators, orcas.

But not to worry; after a few hours the orcas scattered, and we saw many blue whales lifting their flukes high above the water.

Another:

At first I thought this was somewhere in the Mountain West, like Nevada or Utah.  But the railing, the little road, the wires, and the water tank on the building below all said this is not North America.  Also the truck on the street below doesn’t look like a recent North American model, but does resemble a Toyota Hilux sold in Argentina. And I was at Lago Argentino last year.  It’s really blue!  So that’s my answer – El Calafate, Santa Cruz Province, Argentina.

Another:

Good lord, this could be anywhere from California to Australia to the Mediterranean.  For no good reason I am torn between Baja California and South Africa. Since I’ve been to South Africa, I’ll say False Bay, South Africa.

Another:

This reminds me a lot of the view of the mountains in western Jordan from across the Dead Sea.  This might be a view from the town of Ein Gedi, which I seem to remember being up an incline, perhaps near the youth hostel.

Another:

This VYFW contest looks Mediterranean. The mountains across the water could be one side of the Dead Sea, but there are too many trees in the picture, so I assume that’s not it. So I’m thinking the water is the Nile River, as Google Image searches come up with similar mountains in the background.

I’m pretty sure it is in Luxor, Egypt. I could be wrong (and it could be the other side of the Nile), but I spent too much time trying to find the exact address to no avail.

Another:

I’m going to guess Lisbon, Portugal.  I’m not nearly as savvy as your readers who recognize and google the different types of plants that grow in the area, but this looks really similar to the scenes and sights I took in when I visited a friend in Lisbon a couple years ago.  This scene just makes me think of the pretty cafes in Lisbon, where I’d chill out, drink vinho verde, and gaze at the scenery.  I’m sure I’m a continent off, but here’s hoping.

Right continent. Another:

This looks remarkably similar to the view from a hotel we stayed at in 2003 between Mesokampos and Psili Ammos on the Greek isle of Samos. If so, the hills you can see across the incredibly blue water are in Turkey. (I wouldn’t recommend trying to swim it though; it’s a lot further than it looks. Plus you might have some problems with Turkish immigration.)

Right country. Another:

A Greek colleague suggested Thermopylae (and will be awarded the book if she’s correct).  She thinks the mountain range across the water could belong to the island of Evia (Euboea).

Closer. Another:

My guess is the island of Mykonos, Greece. That view looks a lot like an area in the Agean Sea that we spent our honeymoon at.

Almost there. Another:

Unless I am completely wrong, that picture is taken just to the east of Kissamos, Crete looking east toward the Rodopos peninsula.   I have failed miserably with the previous pictures, though I feel decently confident about this one only because of my ancestry.  My grandparents are from this island, and I have been there multiple times.

The photo was taken from Kalyviani village in Crete, but Kissamos is close enough for a free Blurb book. Congrats to the winner! And thanks to everyone for another round of great guesses.

The View From Your Window Contest

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You have until noon on Tuesday to guess it. City and/or state first, then country. Please put the location in the subject heading, along with any description within the email. If no one guesses the exact location, proximity counts.  Be sure to email entries to VFYWcontest@theatlantic.com. Winner gets a free The View From Your Window book, courtesy of Blurb. Have at it.

The View From Your Window Contest: Winner #22

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A reader writes:

Great photo. An interesting mix of old and new. The vase on the balcony and pointed green roof tells us that it’s Asia.  The mould on the walls says the humid Southeast Asia.  The architecture is old with evidence of new buildings.  The sky doesn’t look so polluted, so a fairly open area. I am guessing Malaysia – Kuala Lumpur?

Another writes:

The construction of the buildings and balconies are concrete based.  This leads me to think that the picture was taken in a developing country.  A water tank on the roof of one of the neighboring buildings also supports that hypothesis.  The red corrugated roof with a flame-like capitol on one end makes me think that the building is either in Southeast Asia or south India.  The large high-rise in the background suggests an urban environment.  I am going to go with south India, in a state called Kerala, and in a city called Ernakulam, which is adjacent to Kochi (formerly known as Cochin).

Another:

Jakarta, Indonesia? The largest factor in my guess: the balconies in Indo look exactly like they do in this picture, right down to the paint colours, types of tile used, and the fungus on the stonework.  The spires on the red roof also look Indonesian.

Another:

Finally, a return to the island of Java that I miss so much!

The roof tops of different colors and slopes, the awkward balcony, the broad high rise in the background – it could only be Indonesia’s most populated isle. However, it’s a tossup as to where and which city it is. I’m going to take a stab and guess Surabaya.

Another:

I’m thinking Singapore City, a mile or so from the river, based on how the buildings seem to stop abruptly in distance. Architectural style seems to be something between Chinese and Malaysian.  Everything’s white, like most buildings in Singapore. Cloud cover makes it looks like the picture was taken near an ocean, probably tropical. So yeah, I’m saying Singapore City.

Another:

I’m going to say Bangkok because I used to live there, still have family there, and visit fairly often. This looks like many urban views from the elevated sky train (BTS) that runs through the middle of the city, particularly the roof style, new-but-dirty construction in the near view, optimistic and gleaming office sky-rises in the background … it all says Bangkok. The balcony in the foreground is likely a red herring, as you can get any kind of tile work done in Bangkok, if you’re willing to pay for it or if your condo builder/association has decided that it’s in vogue.

Another:

I’m thinking its Macau, China. The Google map images are blurry and don’t zoom to street level, so it’s a wild guess. Can I get extra points for giving the location in three languages? (Macao Special Administrative Region of the People’s Republic of China – aka –  ?????????????? –  aka –  Região Administrativa Especial de Macau da República Popular da Chinaac).

Another:

I’ve been following this for months.  Usually off by a continent or two every time. This time will be different.

All the balconies are caged in and the building on the right has French shutters.  This has to be a former French Indochina country – Viet Nam, Cambodia, or Laos.  The clincher is that letter “A” on the water tank has a diacritical mark, which suggests that it’s Vietnamese.  The newer building in the background has to be from one of two booming cities in Viet Nam, either Saigon or Hanoi.  Since I was born and raised in Saigon, I’ll take it as my final answer.  Maybe in the District 1 area?

Now mail me my book.  Thank you.

Another:

Very skinny buildings? Water tanks? Strange encaged rooftop patios?  Gotta be Ho Chi Minh City.  But I don’t recognize the modern building on the horizon.

Another:

Those are the Vincom City Towers in Hanoi. You are looking east toward the towers. I don’t think that the picture was taken from as far west as Thong Nhat Park. My best guess (without having much Google street view in Hanoi) is that this is somewhere around 21.009560627° Latitude and 105.845876337° Longitude.

My partner and I are making plans for our first trip to Vietnam next year. Because of that, I’ve spent hours looking at maps and images of Hanoi and the rest of the country.

Hanoi is the correct answer, but the following reader was both first and the most memorable – and thus the winner:

Well, this is rather disheartening for me.  I know that the buildings in the background are the Vincom City Towers in Hanoi.  Unfortunately, I’m not adept enough at Google Earth to get any closer than Hai Bà Tr?ng, Hà N?i, Vietnam for my answer.

What makes this such a bummer is that my Dad lived in Hanoi as a POW for six years (1967 – 1973), so I really really really want to win this one.  (And yes, he was held captive with John McCain for a while.) I’ve been thinking about Hanoi quite a lot lately because my brother recently unearthed some old Air Force footage of my Dad’s repatriation.  It’s hard to describe the emotions that video elicits: a remembrance both of great pain and great joy.

One final, incredible entry:

This is Van Ho 3, Le Dai Hanh ward, Hai Ba Trung district, Hanoi, Vietnam. (Lat. 21.02539  Longitude: 105.85396)  As far as the apartment number, the Yahoo and Google maps list it as 1 van ho 3 – but that is not accurate.  Most residents list their alley and nearest intersection as part of the address. I could email the occupant but thought that might be inappropriate.

This was much tougher than expected. I am sure some seasoned travelers identified the correct city (Hanoi) instantly. But I’ve never been fortunate to travel overseas. I thought it would be easy to identify a pair of twin octagonal towers (Vincom City Towers), but that search was futile. I mistakenly thought those stainless steel tanks on the rooftops were A/C condensers and that set me back a bit.  As it turns out, Hanoi residents place water tanks on the roof due to the lack of water pressure.  The tanks are periodically filled by pumping water from the street.

Ultimately, I narrowed my search to the former French Indochina, specifically urban areas with a lack of hi-rise buildings with a hint of French architecture and colorful rooftops.  Hanoi was probably the third city I examined.  As soon as I saw some pictures of those Hanoi rooftops, I knew I had the right place. I then went to a skyscraper website and got a list of all the hi-rise buildings in Hanoi.  There were only a few sets of matching towers, so Vincom City Towers was easy to identify.

But finding the location of the photographer was more difficult than I ever imagined. There are not many photographs of the area on the web, and the mapping imagery is poor.  I found a few good pics taken from the upper floors of Vincom Towers and that helped narrow it. So I just started searching for pics by street names of where I suspected the pic was taken.  In searching “van ho 3” I looked through dozens of apartment rentals before stumbling upon the Flickr page of the current occupant.  When I googled his name, I found his blog (where he lists the The Daily Dish as one of his favorite sites). Buried in one of his sets on his Flickr page I found other pics from the same apartment rental.

So now I know who sent you the photo.  Here’s a pic from the same balcony:

Image

I previously won the Bahrain contest.  Is this good enough for no. 2?  :)

Only one win per person. But that’s definitely going in the VFYW hall of fame.

The View From Your Window Contest

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You have until noon on Tuesday to guess it. City and/or state first, then country. Please put the location in the subject heading, along with any description within the email. If no one guesses the exact location, proximity counts.  Be sure to email entries to VFYWcontest@theatlantic.com. Winner gets a free The View From Your Window book, courtesy of Blurb. Have at it.

The View From Your Window Contest: Winner #21

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A reader writes:

Tough one!  Just about anyplace, Middle East.  I’m sure people will obsess over the conical steeple in the background and think this is a multi-faith neightborhood, but I think its a red herring.  My guess is somewhere in Iraq (the foreground house looks like its windows are broken).  The buildings look worn but not ancient.  I’ll take a non-traditional guess and say Baghdad, Sadr City.

Another writes:

This picture was taken in Beirut, Lebanon – in the morning, looking west toward Martyr’s Square in an area known as Gemayze.  The minaret with what looks to be a church steeple to the left and the abandoned building coupled with the newer nice looking apartment building seem to give it away.  Great town, wonderful folks.  I hope to go back someday.

Another:

A mosque in cramped quarters, the mixed architectural styles, the cables running from one building to the next (and allowing people to siphon electricity from their neighbours for free), the mixture of dilapidated and fairly new buildings – all this points to Beirut. My only hesitation springs from the fact that I see no bullet holes (remnants from the civil war) on any of the buildings. But there were areas of Beirut that escaped relatively unscathed from the destruction, so let’s assume that this is one of them.

Another:

Switzerland?  Ha ha, no.  I’ll just go with Cairo, Egypt, the city of a thousand minarets.

Another:

Professor Google says that these pencil-type minarets are Ottoman, so that’s something, I guess.  The crumbling building in front has horseshoe (Moorish) arches, but again, they’re too common to be helpful.  The only thing in this picture that I found to be unusual is the small orange satellite dish on the right, but searching “orange satellite dish” led nowhere.  So really, this can be anywhere from Tunisia to India.  My best guess is Amman, Jordan.

Another:

The big clue is the contrasting nature of the mosques in the foreground and background. The minaret of the mosque in the foreground is the typical Arab style. The one in the background is Turkish. There are a couple of ethnic Arab cities in Turkey where you might expect to find both Arab and Turkish-style minarets – Antioch and Alexandretta – but they are relatively clean, prosperous, well kept sorts of cities. In fact, Turkey is generally more prosperous and well kept than the city in these pictures, so instead of looking for Arab pockets in Turkey, I’ll look for Turkish (or Turkmen) pockets in Arab countries.

The general crappiness quotient is high, suggesting that the place has seen its share of conflict, or at least bad fortune. At the same time, the shining new white building toward the right side of the pic indicates a bit of wealth moving into the neighborhood – former emigrants who made good abroad and returned post-conflict, perhaps?

Northern Iraq springs to mind, of course. I’m out of real clues at this point, and it could be anyplace in Northern Iraq as far as I know. So I’ll just choose the city with the largest Turkmen population – Kirkuk. Within Kirkuk, I’ll go for a suburb that is notable for having mixed Arab and Turkmen neighborhoods. Final answer: Al Hawija, Kirkuk, Iraq

Another:

Thank you for the lesson in minarets worldwide. Without really knowing what I’m talking about, and realizing that knowledge by Wikipedia is a dangerous thing, this appears to be a Tatar style of minaret. So, concentrating my Google image and map searches to Northern Africa, I find lots of minarets that look just like this one, only more ornate, in Tunis, Tunisia. This one seems humbler, smaller, and unlikely to attract much tourist attention in this part of a crowded city. I don’t find such minarets in Marrakech, Cairo, Tripoli, Tangiers, or Algiers. So Tunis it is.

Another:

I’ll have to go with Casablanca, Morocco.  Fez is too mountainous, and Rabat isn’t populated enough.  It could be a Lebanon/Turkey city, but I wouldn’t know where to venture a guess.  I’ll go with a known known, Casablanca. (So far, my batting average isn’t bad: East Timor and Krakow, out of around 10.  Here’s hoping I get up to a 300 with Casablanca.)

Another:

I’m going with Bikaner, Rajasthan, India. The spire to the left of the minaret looks like it could be from a simple Hindu temple, so we’re talking India. Architectural screams Rajasthan to me – desert stylings, somewhat cruddy concrete modern buildings. The proximity of wealth (ACs and satellite hookups) to destitution fits as well. The tree isn’t a giveaway, but we’re not talking deep desert. And it’s beautiful weather outside – looks like fall in the Thar desert to me.

Another:

Somewhere near the green line, Nicosia, Cyprus?  The minaret, crumbling concrete building in the foreground and buildings with air conditioning units and water tanks on the roof in the background all fit the bill.  This is where I grew up!

Another:

I’m not a bigot. But when I get off a plane, I got to tell you, if I see buildings that look Muslim, I think, you know, they are identifying themselves first and foremost as Muslim buildings, I get worried. I get nervous.

Another:

The minaret serves a Muslim community.  But where’s the rest of the mosque?  I read on someone’s blog that Ramla (aka Ramle) in Israel was founded by Arabs and minarets are plentiful. Wikipedia says about Ramla:  “…attempts have been made to develop and beautify the city, which has been plagued by neglect…” But this minaret looks relatively new.  Are we somewhere in Europe?

The building in front of the minaret is older and has been abandoned, by the looks of the broken windows.  I thought war zone and investigated Beirut, Lebanon, and Gaza, but there are no bullet holes or evidence of missile attacks.  Just neglect – due to poverty?  The dark building with air-conditioners in the right foreground is common in Cairo.  But minarets have a different style there.  I see hints of red tile roofs, as in Ramla.  So I’ll go with Ramla, even though it could be any of the above places I mentioned or Damascus, Syria, or somewhere in Turkey.

“Hey, what about North Africa?” the VFYW Contest addict in me just asked.  I better send this answer off and go about what’s left of my day.

Another:

It appears as though the photo is somewhere in the Levant, rather than North Africa or a Gulf State.  I also don’t think it’s Iraq, Iran, or Turkey.  Even though the photo offers very few hints about the terrain or climate, the shape of the minaret isn’t characteristic of a Persian/Mughal influence, where they are typically more rounded.  I think it must be a relatively wealthy and big city, judging from the satellite dishes and air conditioning units.  Beirut and Tripoli, Lebanon, Amman, Jordan and Damascus, Syria all just didn’t seem quite right.  Hebron in the West Bank seemed like it could be a candidate, as did Ramallah, but I’m going to go with my gut that it’s not there.  Aleppo, Syria seems to have an abundance of smaller minarets like this and similar buildings.  So that is my guess.

So close. Another:

If I had to guess, I would put this street in Damascus, Syria, where I lived for a year in 2004. If I were to be more specific, I would put it in the Old city of Damascus. And a wild guess would be to put the photographer in a window just outside of the Jewish Quarter of the Old City, otherwise known as the Al-Amin Quarter, not far from the famous Straight Street down the road from Bab Sharqi (the Eastern Gate). If I’m correct, then it is not far from the gallery of the Syrian sculptor Mustafa Ali, and a rare synagogue that is closed and hidden in an alley nearby.

You are correct! From the reader who sent in the photo:

Specifically, it’s in the Shaalan district north-west of the Old City. The minaret glows green at night, of course, and even after months the muezzins still frequently wake me up at 4:30 in the morning, trying futilely to call me to prayer. They’ve refused all my politely-worded suggestions to hold off until at least 6:30.

Six other readers correctly guessed Damascus. But our winner was the first to do so and the most specific, so she gets the Blurb window book.  See everyone else at noon Saturday for the next round.

Map-21

The View From Your Window Contest

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You have until noon on Tuesday to guess it. City and/or state first, then country. Please put the location in the subject heading, along with any description within the email. If no one guesses the exact location, proximity counts.  Be sure to email entries to VFYWcontest@theatlantic.com. Winner gets a free The View From Your Window book, courtesy of Blurb. Have at it.

The View From Your Window Contest: Winner #20

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A reader writes:

Alrighty, this is somewhere in Europe.  Given the haphazard nature of the streets, this could be a medieval city, but the architecture is more modern.  The red brick church with the stone neoclassical front indicates that it was probably built in the mid-1700s or later.  The tower in the background on the left looks like this one in Delft, Netherlands, but the surrounding buildings don’t match up, and the city appears to be much larger than Delft.  I’m going with Brussels, Belgium.

Another writes:

Constanta, Romania? Okay, here’s my logic:  This city looks like Central or Eastern Europe, but there appears to be water in the background, and it strikes me as an inland body of water rather than, say, the Mediterranean.  I thus looked for cities on the Black Sea, and images of Constanta appear to be similar.  I’m sure that even if I’m right, someone else will come up with the exact address, but what the heck, I’ll give it a shot.

Another:

Y’know, this might actually be in Copenhagen. Wish I could find this scene via Google, though. The architecture matches, it’s very flat, there’s what looks like a big body of water in the background. The problem with the architecture is that it also matches so many other places. I saw towers and cathedrals exactly like that in Vilnius, Lithuania, which was my first guess, and searching for “copper domes” or cathedrals brought up some awfully similar places in Ireland. But, I’ve got to say something, and I can’t keep searching Denmark and Lithuania all night, so Copenhagen it is.

Another:

In the foreground is one of the beautiful courtyards at the historic Vilnius University (founded 1571) in Vilnius, Lithuania. The Old Town of Vilnius, where the university is located, is a beautiful, dense, well-preserved medieval city that has been designated a UNESCO World Heritage Center. The steep roofs are typical of the cold and snowy Baltic countries. Vilnius is very much a city of churches (some of them turned into tractor factories or “museums of atheism” during the Soviet period), several of which you can see in the background of the photograph.

Another:

Riga, Latvia? I spent three days there with my brother four years ago. We shot guns in a former Soviet military encampment, ate a palate-cleanser made from balsam and liquid nitrogen and drew so few sober breaths during my time in Latvia that I’m surprised my mouth didn’t catch fire every time I lit a cigarette.

Another:

I think it’s Riga, with a view of Riga Cathedral. I was there in the dead of winter 2008, tracking down genealogical information for my grandfather. My first ancestor to immigrate to the US was a Jewish woman who left from the port there as a young teenager in the mid-1850s. She worked in a garment factory in Boston, married a man twice her age, and was widowed young with four children. My grandfather met her in the early 1930s, and was always impressed with her fortitude.

Another:

This is most certainly Prague.  I don’t feel like finding the exact address, as I will not win, and I have no story to complement my guess.  I had the floor of the hotel in Tromsø and the address in Talinn without result.  I just greatly appreciate the “game”.  For kicks I will say Melnická, Malá Strana 13, 4th floor, though as my Swedish fiancee (who is far more thorough than myself) is experiencing California at the moment.

Another:

I love this contest; it’s a way to indulge my wanderlust. I also teach two sections of a Freshman Writing class. We’re using a travel motif this semester; the readings and assignments are travel related. Since the class meets M/W, it has been easy to incorporate VFYW as the concluding bit of every 1:20 min class, and it makes the last 5 minutes zip by. Mondays we look at what was posted the previous Saturday; my students air their opinions and vehemently argue their differences. I try to point out what seem to be distinctive features of the photograph. My guess is as good as any of theirs. On Wednesdays, we check to see how wrong we were.

In both my classes today, the consensus was that this was Northern European (the churches, the ivy, the red sloping roofs; the medieval architecture in the foreground with modern-looking steel and glass buildings in the background etc.). In my 1:30 class, Eric declared confidently that it was Munich. Some basic googling suggests that he may be right. Someone will of course write in with the precise coordinates , and claim that he/she got married in that very church and their first grandchild was christened there last summer. Still, if it is Munich, or some comparable German city, please give a shout out to Eric.

Not Munich, but hi Eric. Another:

If this isn’t a photo of Bazylika Mariacka (St Mary’s) in Gdansk, Poland, I’ll be embarrassed. I spent Christmas Eve there in 1992.  The view is from the south, I believe. Using google maps satellite view, I am thinking it might have been taken from the history museum.

Another:

My sister and I used to call them ADCs – Another Damn Church (or Cathedral or Castle) – first labeled when we were 16 and 18 years old and running amuck with two months of free rail travel and instructions from Mom to “absorb the culture.”   We obligingly visited hundreds of ADCs over the next three summers (we were living in Brussels at the time) but I can’t say that I ever picked up the fine details that would help me suss out this particular set of churches – are there touches of gothic or are they Romanesque?

In any case, I feel like we are in the north and east of the continent, amongst a mostly Catholic population (three big churches on one street), with a hint of the Germanic among the buildings.  It’s flat, so I’m guessing Poland.  Given the out-of-the-way places of late, I avoided looking at the big cities and a quick google maps scan of a few mid-sized cities lead me to Gorzow, which might be close – but no time to really investigate as I’m sticking with my pledge not to devote more the 15 minutes to this addiction per week …

Another:

My intuition said Czech Republic. It wasn’t Praha or Plzen. I image-searched the cities nearby and thought of Krakow. Then I had to leave. When I came back home, my sister had identified the church towers. I was happy we’d found the spot. But… with a place that well documented (better than Cabanaconde!), I’m afraid we’ll have to get the very window right. 2D geometry hints at the tower. 3D imagination gets me to the floor I marked in the picture.

12.05.59 PM

Should I win the book, I’ll share it with my sister!

Another:

It’s Krakow, Poland, 100% sure. It’s my mother’s hometown (she came to the U.S. in 1978, after marrying my father, a second-generation Polish American). First thing I noticed that triggered recognition was the color of the roofs, the same one I remember seeing there and no where else. From satellite images, you can tell the orange color is common. Next up, Mary’s Basilica, seen in the distance in the top left of the photo. It’s very famous for having two towers of different heights, and from the taller one, a trumpeter sounds the hour (interesting tidbit: the last note he plays is cut short to honor the death of the trumpeter who was shot by an arrow while playing as Mongol hordes were invading, I believe in 1241). So with that, you can also orient the view from the window (the church faces west, so the view must be coming from south of it).

It also must be on higher ground, suggesting to me Wawel Castle/Cathedral, home of dead kings, presidents, poets, other great Polish patriarchs, smok wawelski (the dragon who supposedly lived underneath it until tricked by a shepherd into eating a salted lamb which made him drink so much of the Vistula River that he popped), and most recently, comedians (Lech Kaczy?ski).

As for specific view, I think I’ve narrowed it down to within about 30 feet (or 10m), here. This is the VFYW contest I’ve been waiting for … a perfect excuse for staying in on Saturday night.

Another:

Wawel Castle Vantage Point

Beautiful photo! I’m addicted to this contest but haven’t been able to pin point the location, until today!  The red roofs initially led me to Bavaria and all the beautiful cities in Germany.  However I know many, many cities in Germany and across eastern Europe give off a “feel” like the one in the photo.  So to narrow it down, I focused on the white church in the center.  The fortressesque paired towers and copper spires look old and very unique.  I did some searches for circular arches, paired towers, etc. and found it on the Romanesque Architecture Wikipedia page—the octagonal paired towers are that of the St. Andrew’s Church, in the Old Town district of Kraków, Poland!  The larger baroque church behind it is the Church of Sts. Peter and Paul.

Based on where St. Andrew’s church appears in the photo (and the immense vineage on the building in the foreground) the photo appears to be snapped from the Wawel Royal Castle high up on Wawel hill.   Attached is a photo of Wawel Royal Castle with a circle around the likely window.   This makes me want to go to Poland (or, until I find a job, the G train to Greenpoint)!

Another:

The two churches in the center are St. Andrew’s (which dates from the 11th Century, thus not named for Andrew Sullivan) and the Church of Sts. Peter and Paul.

Another:

I think it’s the window in the attached image.

Wawel

Now with this one you really had me going; I searched for 6 hours. I’ve been a Dish reader since 2002, but you’ve never me engaged like this. The moment I saw this picture it felt like home or very near home, but I didn’t know why (home is in Erlangen, Bavaria). So I tried to narrow it down.

It’s definitely European and it has this Habsburg look of many towns of the former Austrian empire. But I wasn’t sure. The first insight was the chimneys, there are too many of them, so it can’t be in southern Europe. It’s cold there sometimes; there’s snow and rain. I immediately thought that this was Prague but there are no similar churches or any view like this there. The next step was the colour of the roofs. There were a lot of metal roofs, in Germany or Austria metal roofs are rare. In France there are a lot of metal roofs but the town would look much more dense (I learned that from looking at hundreds of roof pictures). So at the end I settled for eastern Europe, somewhere in the former Austrian empire. I went to Google Maps, saw Krakow, Googled “Churches Krakow” and everything matched immediately.

Thank you for the fun. It’s the first riddle I solved with my 9-week-old daughter; she was sleeping on me while I googled chapels, churches and roofs of every Austrian town. If I win I’m going to visit the window with her. I wanted to go to Krakow anyway and now I have a memory to share.

There were so many wonderful entries for Krakow, but we have to pick one.  So the winner of this week’s contest was the first of two previous correct guessers to submit a Krakow entry. He writes:

Ok, after getting cities right twice and not winning, I am going to be super specific, even though I imagine hordes have beaten me to this. The view is from the Wawel Royal Castle  (or Zamek Królewski na Wawelu) overlooking where  the streets Podzamcze and ?wi?tego Idziego intersect (roughly where the foliage covered building and the clay-colored roofed building adjoin).  The window itself is in the smaller of the two towers near the bulge in the wall – let’s say the middle of the three windows shown in that tower in this photo.

If I can win this contest once, I think I can stop caring so much!

Congrats, and we will get a Blurb book out to you shortly. Below are some of the more memorable entries for Krakow. One reader writes:

What luck! I’ve never been compelled to try my hand at this contest, but I just recently returned from a trip to Prague, L’vov and Krakow on break (I’m currently studying abroad in Moscow). I was in Krakow not three days ago; in fact, when this VFYW was posted at noon eastern time, I was entering my 18th hour on a Ukrainian motorcoach to Prague. So, to my surprise and delight, the sight of the Peter and Paul Church immediately gave me flashbacks of seeing it from the belltower of the Wawel Cathedral. It looks very much like my picture of the cathedral, only closer, and it looks like the photographer is lucky enough to live in Krakow.

Another:

I absolutely love the city. I lived there in 1998 for a couple of months. Last summer, I faced the disappointment of returning and seeing how much sex tourism has taken off there. It was nowhere near becoming the bachelor-party capital of Europe when I lived there. I still think it would be a good place to settle, but I’d probably spend most of my time in the Planty park that surrounds the downtown area (jump out this window and walk a little bit to the left to get there). Thanks for the picture, it brought back some nice memories.

Another

Just a cool story from my own travels:  As a white, Jewish 21-year-old New Yorker backpacking through Krakow in March 2002 by myself, among the incredibly friendly people of Krakow was a fellow New Yorker – a black Puerto Rican who had moved to Krakow to teach English after having seen his family torn apart by crime.  We met in an internet café on what was to be my last evening in Krakow, but very quickly, I decided to extend my stay for an extra day. During those 24 hours, I got a tour of some of the parts of the city that were definitely not on my itinerary.  I’ll never forget the fantastic little restaurant in an alley off the main square featuring live jazz and some of the best food and beer (love Zywiec) I’d ever had. I haven’t spoken to or heard from him since.

Another:

That’s my partner’s hometown! We play this game every week but never send in our guess. The view is from the northern wing of Wawel Castle. It’s probably from a window of one of the 2nd floor State Chambers, specifically the Sala Pod Ptakami (The Hall Under the Birds). This room is lined with painted gilded leather and birds dot the ceiling.

The middle of the picture features the twin white limestone towers of St Andrew’s Church on Grodzka Street, which is next to the larger, domed, red brick Lesser Basilica of St Peter and Paul. Further away you can see the Dominican Church; it has the partial gray-green patina copper roof that appears to blend with the roof of St. Mary’s Basilica at the Main Market Square. On the horizon to the far right you can see the “Szkieletor”, a 300 ft unfinished Soviet-era high rise office building dating from 1975. It’s now a gigantic billboard.

By the way, we live in Andrew’s native country (England) because we couldn’t legally be together in our homes in the US or Poland. We have an official Civil Partnership in California but it’s not recognized by either the US government or Poland. That document is accepted by the UK government (Conservatives, Labor, and Liberal Dems), who are all more than happy to let us live in peace and equality in London.

Another:

I spent a long weekend in Krakow in April 1997. I went to visit a friend who was living with his girlfriend in the old Jewish district of Kazimierz, which lies south of the area in this photograph. I believe the photo was taken from Wawel Castle.

Some happy memories: bar hopping in Kazimierz, listened to Klesmer music in the old ghetto, visiting the old Jewish cemetary, wandering the deserted, dark streets of old Jewish quarter in the early morning hours. My friend and I visited Oskar Schindler’s factory, which was not marked by anything except a plaque to 3 Australian crew of a bomber which crashed into the factory in 1944.

Krakow was a mix of Catholic and Jewish heritage, a history of scholarship combined with anti-Semitism, and a tough working class culture which was ascendant during Communist times and which was losing its power as Poland geared up for the new century. I found it to be a sad but hopeful place, on the cusp of something new.

The View From Your Window Contest

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You have until noon on Tuesday to guess it. City and/or state first, then country. Please put the location in the subject heading, along with any description within the email. If no one guesses the exact location, proximity counts.  Be sure to email entries to VFYWcontest@theatlantic.com. Winner gets a free The View From Your Window book, courtesy of Blurb. Have at it.

The View From Your Window Contest: Winner #19

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A reader writes:

Now you’re getting interesting. It feels like India, but not quite.  It almost looks as though there is a touch of East Africa in there.  What is the most common place a person who feels like they are in India, yet is not, tends to find themselves?  I’ll have to go with Ambanja, Madagascar.

Another writes:

It looks too ramshackle to be in North America, though I searched every Colorado mining town for inspiration.  And it doesn’t look Spanish enough to be in South America or in most of Mexico.  Then I thought of the Copper Canyon area of Chihuahua state in Mexico, and Google Images bear out the use of tin roofs in that region, so that’s what I’m going with!

Another:

Do corrugated steel roofs look the same everywhere? If they do, then I am way off, but everything about the rust and pattern and makes reminds me of sitting on the balcony of our favorite restaurant we fondly called the “cockroach” in Murree, Pakistan. I lived there for 14 years, but I don’t think this is in Murree because the mountains seem too close, but certainly feels like the Himalayas. It is a warm weather picture because of the potted plants, I am guessing it was taken during the fall or spring, because if it was the summer there would most likely be monsoon clouds. I googled for twenty minutes, but since I don’t have all night to spend on this one, I’ll leave it with a town where I spent a relaxing vacation: Naran, Pakistan, in the NWFP (North Western Frontier Province) recently changed to the unpronounceable, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Another:

This location seems to be at a high elevation – not above tree line, obviously, but pretty darn high.  I think that’s a Chinese Parasol tree in the foreground.  And with the Asian-style bench, I’d say we’re somewhere in the eastern part of Asia.  The buildings aren’t quite right for China, and the mountains aren’t right for Taiwan or northern Vietnam, Laos or Burma.  The television/radio transmitter in the center of the picture indicates this is a larger city, as opposed to a smaller, less known town high in the mountains.  This may be a bit far too to the west, but I’m guessing Kathmandu, Nepal.

Another:

I used to live in Birtamod, in the far east of Nepal.  We would occasionally head to Kathmandu for R&R.  This certainly looks like the Thamel district to me.

Another:

Namche Bazaar, Nepal?  I spent five days there suffering gastroenteritis on way to Everest base camp.

Another:

I have no entertaining text.  Something about the mountains and the architecture makes me think of Bhutan, and Thimphu is probably the only city that’s big enough.  Go ahead and tell me it’s Chile or someplace.

Someplace. Another:

This is a tough one.  I generally am able to pick the correct continent, but this one … it really could be almost anywhere.

There is a substantial mountain range in the background that, at least during part of the year, is not snow capped.  The dwellings appear to be block construction with low pitched tin roofs.  Both of these clues lead me to believe it’s a warm climate.  It’s a densely populated area with a very limited amount of green space. The orange building appears to be either new construction, abandoned or simply an open air building.  The largest building is of no help at all.  A hospital?  An apartment building?  Who knows!

I scanned the world looking for some place remotely similar (Google Earth is fun!) – could it be Pakistan?  Vietnam?  Hong Kong?  India?   But I keep coming back to South America for some reason.  Thought it might be Rio, perhaps Santiago … but my final answer is Caracas, Venezuela.

Another:

Caracas? The roof tops look very similar to ones that I saw while saying in a seedy hotel there. I think the houseplant is a poinsettia. The radio towers are the same spreading the good news that Chavez spreads.

Another:

I grew up looking at pictures of my parents’ youthful hippy-trail travels through South America, and this photo immediately me of the Andes mountains.  I’m guessing Merida, Venezuela, because if that’s correct, I get to pass on the story of the friend who got banged up in jail for reminding members of the local constabulary (in perfect, although strongly Oxbridge-accented Spanish) that ‘Merida’ is an anagram for ‘mierda’ – spanish for shit.

Another:

The mountain range seems substantial, but that particularly arid mountain (without snow or foliage) seems to be characteristic of parts of the Andes, rather than, say, the Alps or anywhere in Africa.  The tin roofs and rest of the town also don’t seem to fit with any European towns.  The upper portions of the Andes seem to go directly from snow and ice capped to green, without these kinds of mountains in between.  This leaves me with Peru or Bolivia.  Peru, however, doesn’t seem to have a town or village that is close enough to these kinds of mountains. My guess is the immediate outskirts of Cochabama, Bolivia.

Another:

My hunch says the Andes.  The mountains look too dry for it to be Venezuela or Colombia, and those shanties suggest too much abject poverty for it to be Argentina or Chile.  That leaves Ecuador, Peru, or Bolivia.  I think I’m going to toss out Bolivia.  It’s a poor country, but much of the poverty is on the high altiplano, where there aren’t jagged mountains surrounding the cities.  I feel like this is somewhere in Peru.

I dunno, Ayacucho?  The city sits in a narrow valley, unlike some other highland cities.  Cuzco probably has too much tourism money flowing in to look this poor, and Ayacucho was the birthplace of the Sendero Luminoso terrorist group, so I imagine there was enough poverty to stir up Marxist revolutionary sentiment.  Yeah, I’m going with Ayacucho, Peru.

Another:

My guess is Huancavelica, Peru. Such majestic, mystical, and haunting mountains can only be in South America. I can hear the enchanting flutes of the indigenous people now, ancestors of the Incas.

How cultural:

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Another:

This is my first attempt at one of these as it usually seems rather futile to attempt to compete with your more well-traveled (or Google-persistant) readers. One place I have been, however, is Rio de Janero where I saw a lot of the favelas that are a such a(n) (in)famous part of that city. It was these favelas stretching up the hill-sides of Rio that immediately came to mind when I saw this photo.

But the mountains didn’t look quite right. This thought led me on a photographic tour of other mountainous metropolitan areas in South America. I started by heading just south to Sao Paulo and then Buenos Aires – neither of which had the geography I was looking for at all. So I headed west to the Andes and made my way through Santiago, Chile; La Paz, Bolivia, and finally came upon some pictures that looked pretty close in Lima, Peru. Unfortunately, I couldn’t get much more exact than that. So, my guess, for what it’s worth is Lima or one of its surrounding villages (Collique perhaps?).

I love reading the responses to this contest, right and wrong, and am a huge fan of the blog in general. Congratulations on 10 years.

Another:

Peru-huanuco-alud-pic The corrugated steel roofs and the bare walls made me think of South America. The mountains look like the city is located at the juncture of two valleys. Assuming it is evening, the sun comes from the West, so the houses would be East of the Tingo_maria_huanuco_peruriver. Huanaco is located like this.

An image search provided at least two pictures that fit: One showing just these antenna thingies. One has a mountain line in the background that could be the  one in the pic from a slightly different angle. What puzzles me still is that there must be a steep drop behind the houses, and I can’t find this on the maps. Who knows.

Another:

Very characteristic of Peruvian Andes.  I can’t find a comparable photo online, but I am going with La Rinconada, Peru, the highest permanent city in the world at a height of 5,100m.

We have a winner!  While La Rinconada isn’t the right answer, it is the closest to the actual location. From the reader who sent the photo:

Here’s a view from my hotel in Cabanaconde, Peru, just at the edge of the Colca Canyon, taken around 5.09pm on Aug 30th.  The canyon is absolutely stunning:  Twice as deep as the Grand Canyon, home of the Andean Condor (3-4m wingspan!) and untouched by the crowds of tourists that we had seen around Machu Picchu.  Absolutely amazing!

And in case you use it for the contest, the exact location is Room 15, Hotel Kuntur Wassi, Cabanaconde, Peru.  I was going to leave out the room number, but given how brilliant some of your readers have been in some of the contests, I wouldn’t be surprised if someone got it …

Not this round, but congrats to the La Rinconada reader – we’ll get a Blurb book out to you shortly.

 

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The View From Your Window Contest

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You have until noon on Tuesday to guess it. City and/or state first, then country. Please put the location in the subject heading, along with any description within the email. If no one guesses the exact location, proximity counts.  Be sure to email entries to VFYWcontest@theatlantic.com. Winner gets a free The View From Your Window book, courtesy of Blurb. Have at it.