A palimpsest of a place — a surface written over through time, the earlier showing through the later.

Stand in one place and watch a century pass — its streets and faces brought back from the photographs and memories people have saved. A living record of the places we love: open to everyone, owned by no one, and yours to add to.

◆ Open source Open format & corpus · CC0 / CC-BY · Apache-2.0
stand here — where the photograph was taken, looking the way it looked
Where

Places across the world

Each began as a photograph someone kept — find a place you know.

a seeded set of examples · adding your own place, coming soon
drag to spin · click a place to see its memories
From the commons

A sample of memories

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The one rule

What's real and what's a guess, never mixed up

No one ever recorded a place as somewhere you could stand. All that's left are bits and pieces: a map drawn years before, a photo from the air taken later, old photographs pointing who-knows-where. Palimplace keeps each piece as real evidence and builds the place back around it — and never lets the built-back part look like the real thing. When the evidence runs out, we say so, instead of filling the gap with a good guess.

“Never let a guess pretend to be a fact.”

real

The photograph

A real source, a real date, who holds the rights. Sharp at the spot it was taken.

a guess

The built-back part

Clearly a guess — and we always show you how sure we are.

Any memory of a place

Photographs are just the first kind

It doesn't have to be a photograph. Every record simply says how it relates to its place, and that tells us where to put it. A photograph is the hardest kind — you have to work out where it was taken — so we started there. Everything else works the same way.

view of

Photographs

Shown in 3D, at the spot they were taken from.

seeded
about

Memories

A memory or a story, pinned to the thing it's about.

seeded
happened at

Events & film

A moment across an area and a stretch of time; film as a moving view.

planned
describes

Documents & audio

Maps and papers you can read in place; sound placed where it belongs.

planned
Built to stay open

No one can ever close it off

Palimplace is an open format and a few free tools — not a product. The data is just a Git repository: no server in the middle, changes come as pull requests, and one copy is the whole thing. Run git clone and you hold all of it — so no one can ever lock it away. These four promises aren't really promises; they're just how it's built.

Open for good

The data is free to use — CC0, or CC-BY if credit is asked. It's already free even in the worst future: no one can shut it away, because of how it's built, not because a rule says not to.

No fine print

What you give it stays as open as you gave it. The legal move companies use to take a project private — a contributor agreement — this one simply doesn't have.

No login to lose

Your credit travels with the record itself, through signed commits and open ID — not a login someone else controls.

Same rules for everyone, AI too

Anyone can use it; no one can fence it off for themselves — the only honest answer to “will my history quietly become one company's training data?”

Code under Apache-2.0. The name and spec are held in trust for one reason only: to stop a bad actor shipping a malicious fork under the trusted name — never to extract. Fork it on GitHub →
Contribute

The format is the contribution

Add a place you remember and it becomes part of a shared, permanent record anyone can stand inside, fork, and build on — a small gift to everyone who comes looking later. Under the surface each entry is one LP-V object — valid GeoJSON, STAC and JSON-LD at once — its media referenced at the source, the whole dataset a Git repository you can clone entire.