The trail
The Lycian Way (Likya Yolu) was created in 1999 by Kate Clow, who marked the first 500 km using waypaint and a guidebook. Today it stretches across the southern Turkish coast โ through ancient ruins at Patara and Olympos, over the saddle of Mount Tahtalฤฑ, past beaches with no road access, and into pine forests where the trail signs are sometimes the only sign of human presence. Tourism authorities count between 30,000 and 50,000 hikers walking sections of the trail each year, making it Turkey's most-walked long-distance route.
The problem
For two decades, the trail's primary digital presence was a guidebook, scattered blog posts, and PDF maps. Hikers were getting lost, accommodation discovery was word-of-mouth, and the trail's organization had no way to communicate trail closures, weather warnings, or safety incidents to the people actually walking it. International hikers in particular โ German, French, Italian, increasingly Eastern European โ needed multilingual content the existing infrastructure couldn't provide.
We were brought in to build the digital layer the trail had been missing.
What we built
The Lycian Way platform is the most feature-complete deployment of the codebase. It runs on the same architecture that Trailivo customers buy today:
Underneath: a Django backend with 14 application domains, ~65,000 lines of code, full test coverage including multi-trail isolation tests, deployed on a managed VM with Stripe, Resend, Mapbox, OpenWeather, and Sentry integrations wired in. The same backend that you'd run on your trail.
Timeline
The first version of the platform shipped in [VERIFY: launch month/year], built in roughly [VERIFY: weeks] from kickoff to App Store approval. Subsequent releases โ currently at v1.1.0 โ added the AI planner, the community/buddy system, the tour-operator marketplace, and three additional languages including Ukrainian for the post-2022 surge in Ukrainian hikers in Turkey.
What ships today is the 92-screen mobile application, two language-specific websites, an admin platform that the trail's team uses to push notifications and update content, and a Stripe-integrated booking flow. All of it deployed on a single droplet for under $50/month in infrastructure.
Results
- Eight active language locales โ the trail organization can serve a German hiker in German, a Russian hiker in Russian, without operating eight separate websites.
- Offline navigation โ hikers can download an entire stage's tiles, audio, and metadata before leaving WiFi. The Lycian Way runs through long stretches without cell coverage; this isn't optional.
- The org's team handles content directly โ no engineer required to update accommodation, push a trail closure, or add a new translation.
- The trail has a brand for the first time โ searches for "Lycian Way app" return the official product, not 14 third-party guides.
[VERIFY before publishing: total downloads, monthly active users, average session length, % of hikers using offline mode, real customer testimonial from the trail's lead.]