Shanghai Daily

Venice rethinks tourism amid lockdown

- Colleen Barry

In Venice, a city famous for being visited by too many and home to too few, children’s play now fills neighborho­od squares, fishermen sell their catch to home cooks, and water buses convey masked and gloved commuters to businesses preparing to reopen.

At the same time, the famed lacquered black gondolas remain moored to the quay, hotel rooms are empty, museum doors sealed and St Mark’s Square — normally teeming in any season — is traversed at any given moment by just a handful of souls after tourists abandoned the city in late February.

For years, Venice has faced an almost existentia­l crisis, as the unbridled success of its tourism industry threatened to ruin the things that have drawn visitors for centuries. Now the coronaviru­s pandemic has dammed off the tide of tourists and hobbled the city’s economy.

Residents hope the crisis has also provided an opportunit­y to reimagine one of the world’s most fragile cities, creating a more sustainabl­e tourism industry and attracting more full-time residents.

The pandemic — following on the heels of a series of exceptiona­l floods in November that dealt a first economic blow — ground to a halt Italy’s most-visited city, stanching the flow of 3 billion euros (US$3.28 billion) in annual tourism-related revenue, the vast majority of the city’s intake. Promised government assistance has been predictabl­y slow to arrive.

The city that has inspired painters like Canaletto and Turner is now a blank canvas.

“This allows us to rethink life in the historic center,” said Mayor Luigi Brugnaro, speaking in the empty piazza in front of St Mark’s Basilica.

The population of the historic center has shrunk to some 53,000, down by one-third from a generation ago. To help repopulate the center, Brugnaro favors a proposal from the city’s Ca’ Foscari University to rent to students apartments that had been removed from housing stock as tourist rentals. The mayor imagines a dynamic he witnessed in Boston, where those who come to study fall in love with the city and stay.

Brugnaro wants to create a center to study climate change, given the city’s vulnerabil­ity to flooding, that could attract scientists who would become residents. He imagines triggering a sort of Renaissanc­e that would bring other foreign residents — creatives — who for centuries were the city’s lifeblood.

He would like to resize the hit-andrun mass tourism on which the economy depends.

“Venice is a slow city,” Brugnaro said. “The slowness of Venice is the beauty of Venice.”

Visions for Venice’s future include calls to offer tax breaks to bring traditiona­l manufactur­ing back to the historic center. Civic groups have suggested incentives to restore traditiona­l ways of Venetian life, like the standing rowboats used for centuries by residents but that struggle to compete with motorized boats. There is hope that tourist trap shops that disappeare­d after the shutdown will be replaced with more sustainabl­e businesses.

Bevilacqua — the maker of luxury textiles used by fashion houses such as Dior, Valentino and Dolce & Gabbana — is the only manufactur­er in operation on the Grand Canal.

“To relaunch, Venice must return to its past,” said Rodolfo Bevilacqua. “You cannot, and I will use a heavy term, profane it daily. That is, people who don’t clean up after themselves.”

While the pandemic has offered a glimpse at a cleaner, slower Venice, already there are signs of how hard it will be to maintain that, let alone implement grander plans. Jane da Mosto, executive director of the NGO We Are Here Venice, notes that bars that have begun to reopen are serving with disposable plates and cutlery — not more sustainabl­e alternativ­es.

Debates over how to manage tourism have always been heated in Venice and are especially fraught now. Venice’s controvers­ial plan to impose a tax on day-trippers has been put aside — and many object that any such system would give the city even more of a theme park air. The mayor and tourism officials estimate it will be at least a year until tourists — who have numbered 30 million a year — return in any significan­t numbers. While many are reveling in the drop in noise pollution and improved air quality, a year without tourists also means many jobs will be wiped out.

“It will be a fight for survival,” said Claudio Scarpa, the head of the Venetian hotel associatio­n.

The docking of cruise ships is halted for this year. Gondoliers aren’t being permitted to glide through the canals until June 1, and many are struggling, having received just one payment of 600 euros from the government.

Their future even after that date remains uncertain. The gondolier’s position at the rear of the boat allows enough distance to spare them the mask requiremen­t. But Andrea Balbi, the head of the associatio­n representi­ng the city’s 433 gondoliers, said that the rules so far won’t permit them to help tourists on and off the rocky boats. The extended hand is not just a courtesy, Balbi said, but a condition of insurance coverage.

Arrigo Cipriani, the owner of Harry’s Bar, said he is not even thinking about opening the wood-paneled, canal-side bar made famous by Ernest Hemingway until health restrictio­ns are relaxed. His bar offers some of the best people-watching in Venice over peachy Bellini cocktails — but it is just 9.5 meters by 4 meters, which under current rules would allow only a fraction of the usual clientele.

“Hospitalit­y means freedom. It means an absence of imposition,” Cipriani said — and doesn’t happen over a mask.

Brugnaro, the mayor, is hoping to send a signal of recovery by staging the popular Redeemer’s festival in July.

The annual event celebrates the end of the plague in 1577 — one of the most disastrous episodes in Venetian history — with a regatta and a spectacula­r fireworks display. “It will be something out of this world to see,” he said. “Watching from a boat in St Mark’s Basin.”

 ??  ?? A woman works at the Bevilacqua textiles in Venice, Italy.
A woman works at the Bevilacqua textiles in Venice, Italy.

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