The Demand Is Unstoppable': Can Barcelona Survive Mass Tourism?
Briefly

On a steamy August evening, a stream of young people bearing boxes of pizza and bottles of cheap cava began the uphill slog to Carmel Bunkers in Barcelona. Set on a hill overlooking the Catalan capital, the concrete structures once housed antiaircraft weapons that protected the city during Spain's civil war in the 1930s. Later the site became a destination for residents on evening strolls and a hangout for local youths.
But that was before Instagram and TikTok. Several years ago, inspired by social media, young tourists began making the Bunkers a favorite spot for drinking, carousing and the inevitable sunset selfie. Last spring the noise, litter and sheer number of visitors spurred the city to erect fences around the site.
The frustrations experienced by those who live nearby apply to other hot spots: residents of the Gothic Quarter who feel displaced by the crowds; pollution along the waterfront where massive cruise ships dock; and everywhere, it seems, an apparent disregard for local culture.
The Boqueria market on Las Ramblas, once a place where residents and chefs shopped leisurely for raw ingredients, has become one of the most packed tourist sites in Barcelona.
Read at www.nytimes.com
[
|
]