Let $W$ denote the Warsaw circle and $C$ is the space as in the question. By collapsing $C$ down to a point we find the map $f:W\rightarrow W/C \cong S^1$.
$\underline{Claim}$: f is not null homotopic.
If we assume that the $\underline{Claim}$ holds we find the thesis. Indeed, any continuous $f:X\rightarrow Y$ is null homotopic if its domain is contractible; so this will show that $W$ is not contractible.
So, we have done if we prove the $\underline{Claim}$.
$\textit{Proof}(\underline{Claim})$ Assume by absurd that $f$ is null homotopic. Let $e:\mathbb{R}\to S^1:r\mapsto (cos2\pi r,sin2\pi r)$ be the usual helic covering space of $S^1$ and let $H:W\times I\to S^1$ (with I the interval $[0,1]$) be an homotopy between $f$ and a constant map $c:W\to S^1:w\mapsto (0,1)$. Since $e$ is surjective there exists a lifting $c_0 :W\to \mathbb{R}$ of $c$ along $e$.
Now since every covering space is a Hurewicz fibration (see Proposition 1.30 Hatcher Algebraic Topology https://pi.math.cornell.edu/~hatcher/AT/AT.pdf) there is a lifting of $H_0:W\times I\to \mathbb{R}$ of $H$ along $e$ such that $e\circ H_0=H$ and $c_0=i\circ H_0$ where $i:W\cong W\times\{0\}\to W\times I$ is the obviously inclusion. In particular $f_0(-):=H_0(-,1):W\to \mathbb{R} $ is a lifting of $f$ along $e$.
Recall that $C$ is the space as in the question.Let $C$ be the space as in the question. The map $f_{|C}~$ is injective and the commutative equation $ f_{|C} =e \circ f_{0|C}~$ implies that $f_{0|C}~$ is injective too. Moreover $f_{0|W/C}$$ ~:W/C\to \mathbb{R}~$ has image in a connected component of $e^{-1}\{(0,1)\}~$, then it is a constant map. Hence by the universal property of quotient $f_0~$ defines a unique, continuous and injective map $\hat{f}_0:S^1\cong W/C\to \mathbb{R}$. Here we get the absurd since there isn't such map. Indeed if by absurd such map $\hat{f}_0~$ exists then $Im(\hat{f}_0)~$ is a compact, path connected subspace of $\mathbb{R}$ because $S^1~$ is a path connected, compact space (with the topology of subspace of $\mathbb{R}^2$). But compact, connected subspace of $\mathbb{R}$ is simply a closed, path connected interval of $\mathbb{R}~$ $[a,b]$. Finally, we find this second absurd since this implies that $S^1~$ is homeomorphism to a closed, connected interval of $\mathbb{R}$ (i.e. $S^1\cong Im{\hat{f}_0}\cong [a,b]$): this is impossibile since $\pi_1(S^1)\cong\mathbb{Z}\neq 0\cong\pi_{1}([a,b])$.