Kuwait Times

Drones and CCTV: Surveillan­ce for safety on the sand in Spain

Spanish resorts gear up for a summer with a difference

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LLORET DE MAR: Surveillan­ce is the watchword at the seaside this summer, with Spanish beaches using drones, cameras and colored tape to ensure safety for tourists holidaying in the shadow of the virus. Although the pandemic is now well under control, Spanish resorts are gearing up for a summer with a difference, with a host of precaution­s to keep beachgoers safe. Over the curve of the bay in the northeaste­rn resort of Lloret de Mar, a drone lazily flies overhead, the eye in the sky keeping a close watch to ensure there’s no overcrowdi­ng. The aim, says mayor Jaume Dulset, is to “find the balance between people being comfortabl­e and relaxing while ensuring a safe environmen­t.”

At this resort some 70 kilometers up the coast from Barcelona, the town hall has drawn up plans to reassure tourists in the wake of the pandemic which in Spain has claimed more than 28,300 lives. Always full in summer, its beaches are being partitione­d off, with cameras and sensors transmitti­ng real-time informatio­n to potential visitors via an app. With more municipal staff to flag up any non-compliance, they are also using drones that can play recorded messages about social distancing should they spot overcrowdi­ng. There’s also a scheme for reserving areas on the sand - which would be easier to manage than a free-for-all - but for now, that won’t be activated at this resort which is popular with British and French tourists for its family-friendly atmosphere and vibrant night-life.

Saving the summer

For now, only a handful of beachgoers are setting out towels and adjusting sunlounger­s on this kilometre-long (half-mile) beach which can accommodat­e up to 15,000 people. “Normally we would be full by this point but for now, there are very few people so it’s easy to respect the security distance,” explains 78-year-old Jose María Quicio. He and his wife Olga, 81, have set up folding chairs a few meters from the shore inside a red cordon roping off space for those over 70. “This is our area,” say his wife after coming back from a dip in the sea. “It makes you feel safer, it’s good, better than before.”

About 50 meters away, a lifeguard sits on his watchtower, wearing sunglasses and a fabric mask. As well as his normal duties, he must also watch for anyone flouting the distancing norms as well as disinfect the toilets and the first aid posts. “Our first priority is ensuring no one drowns. But from now, we’re also helping out with the rest,” explains lifeguard coordinato­r Joel da Silva. The town hall’s plan involved training 8,500 workers in how to ensure health and safety in such places as well as in restaurant­s, hotels and nightclubs. “There’s a lot of uncertaint­y but we’ve done our homework, we are ready for the tourists to arrive and we’re waiting for them with open arms,” says Dulset. “We’re hoping we can save the season.”

Sectioning-off the sand

Like Lloret, many resorts have developed strategies for avoiding a surfeit of sunbathers along Spain’s 8,000 kilometers of shoreline - a refuge for millions of tourists from Spain and beyond. And the measures are manifold: from sensor-controlled access which can be shut off when capacity is reached, to sections parcelled-off for groups, to banning games taking up too much space or involving a lot of people. And there’s the job of disinfecti­ng sunlounger­s and parasols. “The way we go to the beach this year has changed but that doesn’t mean we can’t enjoy it,” says a promotiona­l video for Benidorm, a southeaste­rn resort hugely popular with British tourists. Its two main beaches have been divided into lots measuring four square meters which beachgoers can reserve through an app. But the system hasn’t yet been used given the lack of visitors to this town that last year counted 16 million overnight stays.

 ?? —AFP ?? LLORET DE MAR: A hotel employee cleans a glass barrier on a terrace overlookin­g a beach in Lloret de Mar as beaches reopen in Spain following a national lockdown to stop the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.
—AFP LLORET DE MAR: A hotel employee cleans a glass barrier on a terrace overlookin­g a beach in Lloret de Mar as beaches reopen in Spain following a national lockdown to stop the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.
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