

In Costa Rica, it is easy to get lost as signage is absolutely terrible. Navigating within San Jose and most major cities, street names are either nonexistent or very obscure - typically the street name is painted in small letters on top of the building wall at each intersection; however the paint usually fades over time making the lettering unreadable. In general people use landmarks to navigate in the city instead of physical address. Addresses are usually given in terms of how many meters – North, South, East or West – a place is from a specific landmark (for example: churches, stores, large trees). Each block is considered to be 100 meters although some are much longer or shorter.
As an example, I was looking for a San Juan Bed & Breakfast in the San José suburb of Tibas. The address was given as 175 meters east of the southeast corner of the Catholic Church. I found the church all right, but wouldn’t you know it, but I really wasn’t sure which way north or south was, so I had to ask. Then after going the right way, I must have drove by this B& B several times.
In frustration, I parked my car near the main park and walked 2 blocks southeast of the church. Sure enough about two blocks away, I discovered a small courtyard set back from the street with a sign advertising “San Juan”. When I inquired inside an office on the ground floor, the lady told me that San Juan B & B had shut down some time ago and the rooms were now used for business offices. Oh well …
In San Jose, my tour operator is Costa Rican Trails - their address is Curridabat (the name of the town), 200 meters south and 250 meters west of POPS (an ice cream store) and building #328. Taking a taxi to their office, the driver found the right street all right but the building numbers did not have any reasonable order to them. In addition to the numbers being out of sequence, odd & even numbers appeared on both sides of the street. The numbering system so confused the driver so much that he had ask a lady on the street where Costa Rican Trails was located. It was then that we discovered that #328 was preceded by #331 and #325 (or something like that). Both the taxi cab driver and I laughed!
To avoid getting lost, your best bet is to shell out some additional monies for GPS - it cost about 10USD extra per day with most car rental companies. If I had GPS on my current trip, it would have saved me a lot of unnecessary aggravation.
Using landmarks with N, S, E and W coordinates instead of physical addresses is not a uniquely Costa Rica custom but apparently is commonplace throughout Central America.
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