Venice Anticipates Unesco Heritage Decision as Tourist Accommodations Surpass Local Residents for the First Time

Venice Anticipates Unesco Heritage Decision as Tourist Accommodations Surpass Local Residents for the First Time

The number ⁣of beds available to​ tourists on Venice’s main island has surpassed ‍the number of year-round residents​ for⁢ the first time, as a⁣ Unesco decision on the city’s future on the world heritage site list looms.

There ⁤are now 49,693 ⁢tourist beds across ⁤hotels and rented holiday homes, compared with ​49,304 inhabitants.

Once the heart of a powerful maritime republic, ⁤Venice’s‌ main island has lost more than 120,000 residents since the early 1950s, driven away​ by myriad ​issues but mainly a focus on mass tourism that has caused the city’s population to be dwarfed by​ the ‍thousands of ‍visitors who crowd its ⁤squares, bridges and narrow walkways each day.

Venessia.com, an activist group that for years has campaigned to preserve Venice’s heritage, has been ⁣keeping track of the population level in the historic centre, displaying the dwindling ‌figure on an ⁣electronic ticker in the window of Morelli chemists since 2008.

The number of residents dipped below 50,000 for the first time ⁤last summer.

“We feel like foreigners in our own home, because ⁤when you walk along the streets we are ​in the minority,” said Matteo Secchi, who leads Venessia.com. “Every now and⁤ then you see ⁣a fellow Venetian‌ and you salute them from afar, but other than that you are surrounded by tourists.”

Ocio, a residents’ group‍ focused on housing issues in ⁤Venice, placed‍ an electronic ticker in the window of the Marco​ Polo ‌bookshop⁣ in April to display the growing ‍number of ‌beds available to tourists in the city.

“We never imagined ‍that within a few‌ months the ⁢number on the ticker​ would exceed‍ that of ⁢the​ residents’ ticker,”⁢ the ⁤association said in a statement on its website.

A recommendation ‍by the UN’s cultural agency to⁣ add Venice to the heritage danger list⁢ will be put to a meeting of Unesco’s world heritage committee, which got under way in ⁣the Saudi Arabian capital, Riyadh,⁤ on Sunday.

The agency said in July that Venice faced “irreversible” damage ⁤due to a litany of problems ranging from the ​effects‍ of climate breakdown to mass tourism, while noting a “lack ⁤of significant progress” by Italy in addressing the​ issues.

The Ocio group said: “Although the [number of tourist beds] had already overtaken [residents] in ⁢some districts, ahead of the [Unesco] meeting we⁢ wanted to highlight how the constant⁣ opening of hotels and the lack⁤ of regulation of short-term rentals have progressively transformed the historic city into‍ a tourist spot.”

Visitors to Venice returned in full force‍ this summer after severe flooding in late 2019 ⁤and then the pandemic disrupted ‌tourism. An average​ of 40,000⁣ daytrippers⁢ poured into the city on peak days, prompting Venice’s local authority to announce it would enforce a long-mooted entrance ⁢ticket from next year.

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2023-09-11 10:38:31
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