Oman Daily Observer

Tourists make their comeback to US capital

- DELPHINE TOUITOU

With the park in front of the White House reopening last week, selfie-snapping tourists have suddenly reappeared.

Washington DC, home to some of the toughest anti-covid regulation­s in the country, is now reopening, highlighti­ng the United States’s steady transition back to normality. Boasting imposing landmarks such as the US Capitol and the Supreme Court, Washington began reopening the doors of its museums on Friday, including the National Museum of African American History and Culture, and the National Portrait Gallery, which will soon host a painting of former president Donald Trump.

By next Friday, six museums run by the famed Smithsonia­n Institutio­n, and the National Zoo, will once again welcome visitors as vaccinatio­n rates climb and infections continue to plunge. The question now is how to attract more tourists and spur an economic rebound after a year of pandemic restrictio­ns that left the US federal capital city, normally a hub for conference­s and meetings of internatio­nal institutio­ns, stricken.

“For the moment, I have very few customers,” said Ngre Phung, whose mobile souvenir shop is parked near the African American museum. So far, DC residents, who are packing the terraces of restaurant­s, haven’t rushed downtown to peruse Phung’s selection of caps, T-shirts and other trinkets. Instead the shopkeeper relies heavily on visitors to nearby museums.

“It’s very key with the museums opening,” said Anne Purcell, director of hospitalit­y market analytics for the northeast region at Costar Group. Between the 555-foot Washington Monument obelisk and a memorial to World War II, Read Scott Martin sat on his pedicab, patiently waiting for customers to emerge from the crowd.

At the moment he gives about three or four tours a day, but that can double on weekends.

“The last few weeks, it was improving,” he said, especially since the city’s Cherry Blossom Festival in the spring. His optimism is boosted by increasing arrivals of tourists from Asia and Latin America.

One of them is 17-year-old Valeria, who came from Peru for a week-long visit, posing for photos in front of the White House with her little sister and parents.

“We wanted to come before the Covid but we have to cancel our trip,” she said.

However, the overwhelmi­ng majority of visitors are from other US states coming to see family, or tourists stopping by on their way to New York. Ghania and Abdel, who live in Los Angeles, were in Washington to visit their daughter Shiraz, 26, who just graduated from Georgetown University.

“This is our first trip in just over a year,” the couple originally from Algeria said in French. “We were waiting to be fully vaccinated and for the city to get a little busier.”

But these leisure travellers are not the ones who typically fill hotel rooms.

Hotel occupancy in Washington, DC on Saturday, May 1 was only 43.4 per cent, slipping to 42.4 per cent the following Saturday, according to STR, which provides data and analysis for the industry.

This is our first trip in just over a year. We were waiting to be fully vaccinated and for the city to get a little busier. But these leisure travellers are not the ones who typically fill hotel rooms

GHANIA AND ABDEL Tourists

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