Click on a label to read posts from that part of the world.
Venice hosts its own funeral
Venice is dying. At least, according to Newsweek it is. The population has been shrinking so rapidly (it dropped below 60,000 this year) that the mag predicts there won't be a single full-time resident in the city by 2030. A city that sees millions of visitors per year, an average of 55,000 per day, won't be home to a single person. Yeah, I'd call that a dead city. To draw attention to the issue, residents of Venice have organized a mock funeral in which three gondolas will pull a red coffin through the city's canals on Saturday, November 14th.
In addition to the flood of tourists who make the city nearly unlivable during summer months, other factors such as increasing home prices and a shrinking tax base, have combined to result in the mass exodus of long-time Venetians.
One of the organizers of the "funeral" says this doesn't have to be the end though. He hopes that by drawing attention to the issue, some of the problems can be addressed and new citizens will be lured to Venice. "It might be the beginning; it could even spur a rebirth. Now we just have to create a Venice [people] will want to stay in. We have to give them a reason not to leave."
[via Budget Travel]
Filed under: Festivals and Events, Europe, Italy, News








Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Joe Nov 16th 2009 11:03AM
Good luck with that. I'm sure they are an inconvenience, but it's not the tourists that are driving out the venetians, it's the water. The houses and the land are sinking, even though the city has taken drastic measures to stop this, you still can't fight mother nature. Houses are expensive because they require a lot of upkeep. And not simple slap some paint on it upkeep.
They are crumbling from underneath. And to fix that type of problem requires an owner with deep pockets. Some (or most from my perspective) of the mansions and homes have been converted to hotels.