Calgary Herald

‘Overtouris­m’ swamps popular Amsterdam

Dutch capital pushes back in attempt to curb large influx of noisy tourists

- MIKE CORDER

A group of cyclists slams on the brakes as a man pushing a wheeled suitcase stops abruptly in the middle of a busy bike path in downtown Amsterdam to pick up a toiletries bag he dropped.

“If we wait a bit longer, he’ll probably start cleaning his teeth,” one rider says to his neighbour, humour failing to mask his frustratio­n.

It’s a scene that is emblematic of the problem of overtouris­m that is clogging the streets of cities like Amsterdam, Rome, Barcelona and Venice.

The Dutch capital, with its World Heritage-listed canals, narrow streets and web of alleys in its red light district, is now pushing back in an attempt to keep the city attractive to visitors and residents alike. But some say it’s not going far enough.

Overnight stays in hotels here rose from just over eight million in 2006 to 14 million in 2016. The number of people visiting the Anne Frank House has set records seven years in a row, to nearly 1.3 million last year. Every weekend, the heart of the city is overrun by foreigners in strip joints and seedy bars. They gawk at scantily clad prostitute­s flaunting themselves behind windows in the red-light district, and they jam cafes where marijuana is permitted.

City alderman Udo Kock has a message for the drunken revellers: “If the only reason for you to visit Amsterdam is to get loaded, to get stoned out of your mind, look, we can’t hold you back from coming, but we don’t want you here.”

It’s not just the young visitors arriving via budget airlines, staying at cheap hostels and hotels. Add crowds of day-trippers from cruise ships moored nearby and Airbnb guests shoving suitcases noisily along cobbled streets and you have a toxic mix for local residents.

With attraction­s such as the Van Gogh Museum, Rijksmuseu­m and Anne Frank House, Amsterdam has plenty of places of interest beyond the red-light district. Tourists pump cash into the economy and create jobs, but the impact of millions of visitors on a city of 850,000 is high.

“It hurts the character of the city,” Kock said. “There are really neighbourh­oods ... where you sim- ply see that the people that used to live there don’t want to live there anymore.”

Amsterdam is trying to regulate the problems, but Kock said “there is no golden bullet ... It’s such a complicate­d problem that you have to use every policy measure that you can possibly find, big and small. Everything. And you have to be creative.”

Among the many changes Amsterdam has enacted or is considerin­g: halting constructi­on of new hotels; banning “beer bikes,” which are large, slow, pedal-powered bars; shifting the cruise ship terminal out of the city centre and outlaw- ing new tourist-only stores in the oldest part of the city and its busiest shopping streets.

One of the biggest deals was with Airbnb, which agreed to enforce a 60-day-per-year limit on Amsterdam properties and to collect tourist tax for the city from renters.

 ?? PETER DEJONG/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A canal cruise boat passes under art work, part of the sixth edition of the Amsterdam Light Festival in Amsterdam. The city is considerin­g a variety of changes to tame rampant tourism.
PETER DEJONG/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A canal cruise boat passes under art work, part of the sixth edition of the Amsterdam Light Festival in Amsterdam. The city is considerin­g a variety of changes to tame rampant tourism.

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