Bangkok Post

Venice hotel bookings are down 45% following floods.

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ROME: Fears of more unpreceden­ted flooding in Venice has brought hotel reservatio­ns down by 45%, the city’s hoteliers associatio­n said.

Last month, the northern Italian city of canals was hit by the highest tide in more than 50 years, with tourists wading through flooded streets to seek shelter as a fierce wind whipped up waves in St Mark’s Square.

The exceptiona­lly intense “acqua alta,” or high waters, peaked at 1.87 metres on November 12, according to the tide monitoring centre.

“Since mid-November, following a historic flood, we have seen an unpreceden­ted drop (in the number) of bookings. This did not even happen after the attacks on the Twin Towers,” said Vittorio Bonacini, chief of the Associatio­n of Venetian Hoteliers during a press conference on Friday.

“We recorded a peak of 45% cancellati­ons (in the last 30 days) and had to cancel events, conference­s and major initiative­s planned for next year,” he added.

Bonacini said people’s understand­ing of the situation on the ground was far from reality.

“We have received worried calls from the United States, asking us if a child one and a half metres tall could visit without being in danger.

“But Venice is more than a metre above sea level and that when people speak of a 1.3- metre-high tide, the reality is the water level is only 30 centimetre­s and only in some parts of the old city,’’ he said.

The historic high tide lasted only an hour and a half, before the situation normalised within in a few hours.

According to the associatio­n, more than 31 million tourists visited Venice last year — but 20 million spent only one day there and only 11.5 million stayed at the 274 hotels in the historic centre.

 ?? AP ?? A woman wades through water during a high tide at St Mark’s Square yesterday.
AP A woman wades through water during a high tide at St Mark’s Square yesterday.

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