Bangkok Post

TOURIST TROUBLES

AUSTRIAN VILLAGE OF HALLSTATT WANTS FROZEN FANS TO LET IT GO

- STORY BY Laura M. Holson/NYT TIMES COMPANY

They arrive by the busload and on ferries, many in pursuit of the perfect photograph for Instagram, others seeking the transcende­nce of a fairytale land.

Each year, a million travellers visit Hallstatt, Austria, a picturesqu­e 16th-century hamlet they say inspired the fictional kingdom of Arendelle in the Disney animated blockbuste­r Frozen.

Never mind that the 2013 film — and its 2019 sequel — was influenced by Norway’s wintry splendour more than 1,500km away. Or that Disney offers Frozen-inspired activities on its cruises in Norway. To be fair, Hallstatt looks remarkably like Arendelle, which is why visitors continue to arrive. But the 780 people who live there have had enough.

In May, Hallstatt is embarking on a campaign to focus on quality — not quantity — tourism, according to local officials.

Tour buses, which tally as many as 90 on the busiest days, will be capped at 50 and must register with the tourism office. Groups that arrange lunches at local restaurant­s, sign up for boat cruises or visit Hallstatt’s famous salt mines will be given preference.

Visitors, too, will be asked to stay more than two hours, said Michelle Knoll, office manager for Hallstatt’s tourism board. The goal is to get people to spend time and money in Hallstatt’s restaurant­s and shops.

“Many visitors only have a short time and only come to take some pictures,” Knoll said in an email. She added: “The number of tourists is simply too much.”

A lot of countries and cities court new visitors after a movie or television show is released. New Zealand built a lucrative travel industry based solely on the Lord Of The Rings franchise. (It was filmed there.) In 2018, the Singapore Tourism Board partnered with Warner Bros., the studio behind

Crazy Rich Asians, to tout the country as a luxury destinatio­n.

For travellers, too, there are bragging rights. Want to visit the barren desert where

Mad Max: Fury Road was filmed? Orbitz has a map with locations on the Skeleton Coast in Namibia. What about the souks and medina in the James Bond film Spectre? Orbitz has mapped their locations in Tangier, too.

But an influx of curious travellers comes with a cautionary note. Consider what happened to Maya Bay on Ko Phi Phi, an island in Thailand where the Leonardo DiCaprio movie The Beach was filmed. After the movie’s release in 2000, a daily influx of as many as 5,000 tourists and 200 boats damaged 80% of the coral reef. As a result, the beach was closed and won’t reopen until 2021 to give the reef time to repair.

The effect on Hallstatt has been less severe but equally intrusive. Churches have had to hire bouncers to keep selfie-seeking tourists from interrupti­ng funerals and Sunday services, according to news reports. Guests are warned not to use drones or trample village property. After a fire broke out in November, Hallstatt’s mayor, Alexander Scheutz, implored travellers to stay home so locals could fix the buildings.

He recently said he hoped to cut the number of tourists by one-third this year.

Elizabeth Becker, author of Overbooked: The Exploding Business Of Travel And Tourism, said that tourists should manage their enthusiasm after seeing exotic locales in movies and on television.

“Even nice people start to act like barbarians,” she said of overcrowde­d tourist spots. “Why do we expect to walk into anybody else’s life and have their romantic adventure?”

That’s particular­ly true in communitie­s that are ill-equipped to handle the tons of additional garbage that tourists bring with them. Then there is the surge in water usage, Becker said.

It’s especially troublesom­e if there are not enough hotels, bathrooms and grocery stores to handle the hordes. She noted that even establishe­d tourist destinatio­ns like Dubrovnik, Croatia, which saw a flood of visitors with the popularity of HBO’s Game

Of Thrones, buckle at first when the large cruise ships arrive.

“Communitie­s need to recognise a tipping point has occurred and figure out how they will address it,” Seleni Matus, executive director of the Internatio­nal Institute of Tourism Studies at George Washington University, said in an interview. “They need to increase awareness of how behaviours can impact a community negatively.”

Hallstatt, a Unesco World Heritage site, was popular before the release of Frozen, particular­ly among Asian tourists. The village was replicated in China’s Guangdong province in 2012, and the Chinese copy has become a favourite attraction there. But Hallstatt’s prominence grew with the movie and the ascendance of Instagram.

Last year, Harper’s Bazaar named Hallstatt one of the 10 most “Instagramm­able” cities in the world. The hashtag #Hallstatt has more than 618,000 posts. One Instagram account dedicated to the village, @ hallstatt_gram, has more than 16,000 followers. Its tagline: “Hallstatt is awesome.”

Sure, it may be awesome. But Hallstatt is overburden­ed too, according to Knoll.

Scheutz, the mayor, has been in touch with his counterpar­ts in nearby Salzburg. That city saw a surge in popularity after

The Sound Of Music debuted in 1965. Salzburg’s local economy is now fuelled, in part, by the Sound Of Music travel boom. But, like Hallstatt, it has problems with short-term visitors.

“Hallstatt doesn’t need so many tourists,” Knoll said, “but rather those who really enjoy the time.”

 ??  ?? A boat travels on Hallstaett­ersee lake near the alpine village of Hallstatt in the province of Upper Austria.
A boat travels on Hallstaett­ersee lake near the alpine village of Hallstatt in the province of Upper Austria.
 ??  ?? Tourists visit the cemetery in Hallstatt.
Tourists visit the cemetery in Hallstatt.

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