SWAKOPMUND, NAMIBIA | “Where the Oldest Desert Meets the Atlantic”
Swakopmund is the most improbable town on earth — a perfectly preserved German colonial resort sitting at the precise point where the Namib Desert, the oldest desert on earth, meets the cold South Atlantic on the Skeleton Coast of Namibia. The wide streets are lined with Wilhelmine-era buildings: the lighthouse, the Woermann House, the 1905 wooden jetty extending into the surf, and the railway station that once connected the Kaiser’s African territory to the interior. Behind the town, red dunes begin immediately and extend 2,000 kilometers into the continent. In front of it, the Benguela Current drives cold, fog-laden air off the Atlantic, keeping the coast temperate year-round in the middle of one of the world’s driest regions. The result is a town of extraordinary contrasts: German bakeries and adventure sports outfitters on the same street, schnitzel and kudu on the same menu, fog and desert in the same morning.
The colors are specific and strange: the warm ochre-red of the Namib dunes inland, the cold steel-grey of the Atlantic offshore, and the warm terracotta of the colonial buildings between them — a palette that belongs entirely to this 50-kilometer stretch of African coastline.