The Japan Times - Mass tourism returns to Barcelona -- so does debate

EUR -
AED 4.257133
AFN 72.444674
ALL 95.829467
AMD 436.123898
ANG 2.075051
AOA 1062.979611
ARS 1619.927116
AUD 1.662949
AWG 2.089154
AZN 1.961607
BAM 1.952301
BBD 2.330054
BDT 141.955547
BGN 1.981418
BHD 0.437657
BIF 3435.911542
BMD 1.159192
BND 1.480234
BOB 8.011674
BRL 6.066866
BSD 1.156841
BTN 108.398101
BWP 15.851518
BYN 3.424861
BYR 22720.166462
BZD 2.326759
CAD 1.59725
CDF 2640.052316
CHF 0.915588
CLF 0.026946
CLP 1063.976571
CNY 7.989967
CNH 7.996768
COP 4295.177918
CRC 539.017545
CUC 1.159192
CUP 30.718592
CVE 110.069127
CZK 24.433505
DJF 206.01339
DKK 7.471961
DOP 69.303682
DZD 153.541818
EGP 61.030197
ERN 17.387882
ETB 178.839134
FJD 2.59688
FKP 0.866178
GBP 0.866444
GEL 3.135607
GGP 0.866178
GHS 12.639399
GIP 0.866178
GMD 85.201782
GNF 10139.737209
GTQ 8.859235
GYD 242.112884
HKD 9.073443
HNL 30.633166
HRK 7.53266
HTG 151.686795
HUF 389.417278
IDR 19603.098726
ILS 3.626359
IMP 0.866178
INR 108.882282
IQD 1515.48352
IRR 1522048.293968
ISK 143.797806
JEP 0.866178
JMD 182.557257
JOD 0.821883
JPY 184.301707
KES 150.347695
KGS 101.369619
KHR 4642.638094
KMF 493.815498
KPW 1043.28958
KRW 1737.930242
KWD 0.355153
KYD 0.964072
KZT 558.478935
LAK 24907.353963
LBP 103603.19292
LKR 363.638184
LRD 212.292217
LSL 19.722248
LTL 3.422794
LVL 0.701184
LYD 7.375874
MAD 10.784829
MDL 20.233731
MGA 4830.237703
MKD 61.61784
MMK 2434.497817
MNT 4137.699448
MOP 9.322989
MRU 46.138904
MUR 53.856252
MVR 17.920827
MWK 2005.961085
MXN 20.574276
MYR 4.585797
MZN 74.083768
NAD 19.722248
NGN 1594.596801
NIO 42.573321
NOK 11.261087
NPR 173.429893
NZD 1.994668
OMR 0.44571
PAB 1.156831
PEN 4.001527
PGK 4.996002
PHP 69.669724
PKR 323.20654
PLN 4.271217
PYG 7548.566992
QAR 4.218693
RON 5.094531
RSD 117.453971
RUB 93.320592
RWF 1692.415273
SAR 4.351013
SBD 9.322194
SCR 17.275706
SDG 696.674379
SEK 10.818566
SGD 1.483041
SHP 0.869694
SLE 28.523343
SLL 24307.692683
SOS 661.095037
SRD 43.284086
STD 23992.937445
STN 24.455952
SVC 10.122855
SYP 128.610351
SZL 19.720566
THB 37.944417
TJS 11.100346
TMT 4.068765
TND 3.393262
TOP 2.791056
TRY 51.41201
TTD 7.859911
TWD 37.055322
TZS 2976.294269
UAH 50.806534
UGX 4332.17858
USD 1.159192
UYU 47.146101
UZS 14113.701414
VES 531.927969
VND 30544.133989
VUV 138.532821
WST 3.174102
XAF 654.769215
XAG 0.015869
XAU 0.000255
XCD 3.132775
XCG 2.084963
XDR 0.814323
XOF 654.791769
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.58016
ZAR 19.668651
ZMK 10434.117463
ZMW 21.894039
ZWL 373.259405
  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.87

    -0.04%

  • GSK

    0.9600

    52.95

    +1.81%

  • AZN

    1.7100

    185.78

    +0.92%

  • BCE

    0.0700

    25.83

    +0.27%

  • RIO

    0.9300

    86.77

    +1.07%

  • BTI

    -0.1600

    57.76

    -0.28%

  • BP

    1.2200

    44.79

    +2.72%

  • BCC

    1.6900

    73.57

    +2.3%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    22.63

    -0.49%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    82.33

    +0.33%

  • JRI

    0.1800

    11.86

    +1.52%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    14.66

    +1.23%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2800

    15.69

    -1.78%

  • RELX

    -1.3500

    32.46

    -4.16%

Mass tourism returns to Barcelona -- so does debate
Mass tourism returns to Barcelona -- so does debate / Photo: LLUIS GENE - AFP

Mass tourism returns to Barcelona -- so does debate

Visitors are once again jamming the narrow streets of Barcelona's Gothic quarter as global travel bounces back from the pandemic, reviving tensions over mass tourism in the Spanish port city.

Text size:

Hotel occupancy in the city rose in April, which included the Easter long weekend, to nearly 85 percent, close to its pre-pandemic levels, according to the Barcelona Hotel Guild.

"There are more and more cruise ships, more and more tourism, more and more massification," said Marti Cuso, a high school biology teacher who has long campaigned against mass tourism invading the city centre.

"This has been a shock after two years of pandemic," said Cuso, 32, who had hoped the city would use the pandemic pause to change its tourism model.

Cuso, who grew up in the Gothic quarter, said he enjoyed the calm that descended on the neighbourhood, which is normally flooded with tour groups visiting its mediaeval buildings.

After receiving a record of nearly 12 million visitors at its hotels and tourist apartments in 2019, arrivals plunged by 76.8 percent in 2020, mirroring declines across Europe.

"People reclaimed the squares, children played in the streets again," said Cuso.

The pandemic also showed the dangers of having an "economic monoculture based on tourism," he said.

"The majority of residents who worked in tourism found themselves out of work overnight," said Cuso.

Tourist arrivals in Barcelona had risen steadily before the pandemic and the tourism sector accounted for around 15 percent of the economy of Spain's second-largest city before the health crisis.

- 'Control the damage' -

The boom in tourism sparked a backlash, with regular protests, including one in 2017 where vigilantes slashed the tyres of an open-top tourist bus and spray-painted its windshields.

Barcelona residents identified tourism as the city's main problem in a poll carried out that year by city hall.

"We must change the model to reconcile the two worlds. We can't have the tourists' city on one side and the city of locals on the other," Francesc Munoz, who heads an Observatory studying Urbanisation at Barcelona's Autonomous University, told AFP.

With terraces once again full of tourists drinking sangria, Barcelona's leftist city hall said recently it plans fresh measures to tame the sector.

Access to the busiest squares could be restricted, and the circulation of tourist buses more tightly regulated.

Barcelona city hall has already cracked down on illegal listings on online rental firms like Airbnb and banned tour groups from entering the historic La Boqueria market during peak shopping times.

"Tourism is an important economic, social and cultural asset for Barcelona," said Xavier Marce, the city councillor in charge of tourism.

"We need to optimise the benefits and control the damage. This is the debate which all European cities are having," he added.

- 'Find a balance' -

Marce rejected the argument that the city did not use the two-year slump in arrivals due to the pandemic to change the city's tourism model.

"Two years have not been lost. It is very difficult to solve the problems of tourism when there is no tourism," he said.

Tour guide Eva Marti, 51, said she understands the concerns of residents, but believes formulas must be found to maintain an activity which provides a living to many locals.

"During this 13 years I have worked as a guide, it is harder and harder to show tourists around," she said in a reference to measures such as rules limiting the size of tour groups to 15 people in some areas.

"We have to find a balance," she added at a sun-drenched esplanade in the Gothic quarter before taking a tour group back to their cruise ship in Barcelona's port.

Cuso, the anti-mass tourism campaigner, agreed with her.

"We are not asking for zero tourism. There will always be tourism, but we have to have a diversified city, where tourism coexists with other types of economic activity," he said.

Y.Mori--JT