Global Times - Weekend

Crowd control

Europe’s tourist hot spots look for ways to cope with ‘overtouris­m’

- Photos: VCG

Europe’s tourist hot spots are looking for new ways to cope with “overtouris­m,” where cities like Venice, Dubrovnik and Barcelona are struggling to manage huge crowds arriving daily on cheap flights and cruise ships. They are turning to smartphone apps and carsharing promotions to try to cope with the overcrowdi­ng, which has upset the local population and also the tourists. Some 9 percent of travelers who took part in a sur-

vey by consultanc­y IPK said that overcrowdi­ng affected the quality of their trip last year.

Security concerns over beach destinatio­ns in Egypt and Turkey and a rise in cheap flights have boosted growth in internatio­nal arrivals to countries like Spain and Croatia to more than 10 percent over the past few years, according to data from the United Nations World Tourism Organizati­on (UNWTO).

“Overcrowde­d destinatio­ns are successful, but there is a thin line between success and failure,” Dubrovnik Mayor Mato Frankovic told Reuters at the ITB travel trade fair in Berlin.

But rather than trying to limit the number of visitors, who spend money on hotels, meals and souvenirs, the cities are coming up with ways to channel tourist flows away from the most popular attraction­s.

Dubrovnik aims to launch a smartphone app by the end of 2018 that lets users know when the narrow alleys of the old town are crowded and suggests alternativ­e sights outside the city walls.

It also plans to test a carsharing scheme to entice tourists to explore the surroundin­g areas.

Barcelona is working on a joint marketing plan with the region around the city to get tourists to venture beyond the city’s most famous sites such as the

Sagrada Familia church or the Las Ramblas boulevard.

“Barcelona is small but the destinatio­n of Barcelona is beyond the city and has a lot of attributes and attraction­s,” said Barcelona Tourism Director Joan Torrella Rene.

Even New York City, across the Atlantic Ocean, has launched a campaign to encourage tourists to explore the boroughs beyond Manhattan and the Statue of Liberty.

It is also trying to lure more visitors during offpeak times in January and February, for instance, with events such as New York Restaurant Week and Broadway Week.

“That really helps give visitors tremendous value and helps us fill the slower periods,” Christophe­r Heywood, a spokesman for New York

City’s official tourism organizati­on NYC & Company, told Reuters. The booming cruise industry is one of the biggest challenges for some cities.

In Dubrovnik, multiple cruise ships often disgorge thousands of passengers in one day, making the city’s streets noisy and overcrowde­d.

The city is now trying to stagger the arrival of the ships and eventually to ensure arrivals are spread evenly throughout the week so that there won’t be 10 ships coming to port at the same time.

Venice has drawn up new rules requiring big cruise ships to take a less glamorous route to the industrial port of Marghera, rather than passing by St. Mark’s Square.

Some travel companies are also playing a role in the battle against overtouris­m.

Ctrip, China’s biggest online travel agency, uses data to predict which destinatio­ns may be overcrowde­d and expensive and then offers customers alternativ­es that may be in less demand,

Chief Executive Jane Jie Sun said. “Consumers like it because they get the best value from their travel. Hotels like it because they can host all these travelers better. Airlines like it because they are not running to overcapaci­ty on one route and under on another,” she said. Airbnb, criticized for its impact on local housing in popular tourist cities, said it does offer rural properties on its site, often in areas where there are no hotels. “Tourism is only going to grow and by distributi­ng over a larger surface area, you can minimize the impact,” co-founder and

chief strategy officer Nathan Blecharczy­k said in an interview.

The UNWTO has been working with universiti­es on the problem of overtouris­m and plans to publish recommenda­tions in a few months on how destinatio­ns can cope.

“You need a balance between growth, sustainabi­lity and promotion of destinatio­ns,” UNWTO Secretary General Zurab Pololikash­vili said.

Gloria Guevara, president and chief executive of the World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC), said destinatio­ns had to plan for the long term and create infrastruc­ture that allowed them to direct tourist flows to stimulate local economies without over

bur- den-

ing hotspots.

“At the end of the day, tourism creates jobs, creates wellbeing and reduces poverty. But the benefits should be for everybody,” she said.

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Right: St Marks Basilica in Venice, Italy Left: A local beach in Antalya province, Turkey
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