Los Angeles Times

More visitors to L.A. County

The record number of tourists last year is a 4% increase over 2015.

- By Hugo Martin

The area hosted a record 47.3 million tourists in 2016, a 4% increase over the previous year.

For the sixth year in a row, Los Angeles County has set a fresh record for visitors, with 2016’s surge coming from both domestic and internatio­nal visitors with a taste for warm weather and new magical tourist attraction­s.

During a news conference Wednesday at Universal Studios Hollywood, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said that L.A. County hosted 47.3 million visitors in 2016, a 4% increase over the previous year.

Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport, already one of the nation’s busiest airports, was the point of arrival for many of those tourists: It saw a record 80.9 million passengers last year, an 8% increase over 2015. Of those, 22.6 million, or 28%, were internatio­nal travelers, who tend to stay longer and spend more than domestic visitors.

Garcetti attributed the growth partly to investment­s made in the last few years on several new attraction­s in Los Angeles County, including the new Wizarding World of Harry Potter expansion that opened last year at Universal Studios Hollywood.

The park was so popular over the New Year’s holiday weekend that it reached capacity for the first time in its history, forcing park officials to temporaril­y close entrance gates.

Travel and tourism officials have attributed the increase in spending on travel, which is happening nationwide, to lower fuel costs and airfares, along with increased economic optimism among most Americans. Las Vegas reported a record 42.9 million visitors last year, surpassing the previous record of 42.3 million in 2015.

A surge in travelers from China has pushed that country past Canada as the second-biggest source of internatio­nal visitors, behind only Mexico, said Ernest Wooden Jr., chief executive of the Los Angeles Tourism & Convention Board.

Los Angeles County drew 1.8 million visitors from Mexico, followed by a record 1 million visitors from China and 708,000 visitors from Canada.

In 2016, Wooden said, L.A. County surpassed New York as the top U.S. destinatio­n for Chinese visitors.

“We had an unbelievab­le year in tourism,” he said during the news conference.

In an interview later, Wooden said his agency has heard feedback from Middle Eastern countries and Mexico that residents worry they might not be welcome to visit the U.S. once Presidente­lect Donald Trump takes office. But Wooden said Los Angeles plans to spend money to spread the word that Los Angeles is open to all visitors.

“I’m confident that Mr. Trump values tourism,” he added.

Garcetti said he hopes that the momentum will continue this year so the county can reach his goal of 50 million visitors a year. The mayor noted that Los Angeles beat San Francisco to be home to the $1-billion George Lucas Museum of Narrative Arts. Groundbrea­king is expected before the end of the year, with the project set to open by 2021.

“There’s even more opportunit­y on the horizon and an even bigger role for L.A. to play on the world stage,” he said.

L.A. County hotels reported an average 81.3% occupancy rate for 2016, the first full year that the county average surpassed 80%, tourism officials said.

The region also benefited last year from a record 8.8 million cargo containers shipped through the Port of Los Angeles, up from the previous record of 8.5 million in 2015, Garcetti said.

The mayor said the combinatio­n of higher tourism numbers and increased port traffic has helped create more than 140,000 jobs and about 150,000 new businesses in the county since 2013.

hugo.martin@latimes.com

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? L.A. MAYOR Eric Garcetti, left, and Ron Meyer, vice chairman of NBCUnivers­al, walk through the Wizarding World of Harry Potter attraction at Universal Studios Hollywood before the Wednesday news conference.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times L.A. MAYOR Eric Garcetti, left, and Ron Meyer, vice chairman of NBCUnivers­al, walk through the Wizarding World of Harry Potter attraction at Universal Studios Hollywood before the Wednesday news conference.

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