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Coronavirus: Can Germany revive its hollowed-out city centres?

The charming German city of Lübeck was lovingly done up for the holidays with fairy lights and garlands but the usual festive bustle was eerily absent this pandemic-scarred winter.

Coronavirus: Can Germany revive its hollowed-out city centres?
Lübeck's normally bustling Hüxstraße, pictured here on December 10th, was largely empty over the holidays. Photo: Morris Mac Matzen/AFP

Across the country, all non-essential businesses have been forced to shut
until at least mid-January to help stem a second coronavirus wave engulfing
Europe's top economy.

But many of the “closed” signs in shop windows in the town centre, with its
signature brick facades and sumptuous art nouveau villas that made it a UNESCO World Heritage Site, have given way to “out of business” notices.

The Hanseatic city, population 220,000, has not escaped the urban blight which has plagued many German city centres for years but whose spread has been spurred on by the pandemic. 

In Lübeck, known around the globe for its traditional marzipan and visited by 18 million tourists in 2019, 20 percent of retail space remains empty — a figure that has been rising for several years.

READ ALSO: Travel: Why Lübeck is still 'the queen' of northern Germany

In the middle of the main high street, Olivia Kempke points to a clothing store that went bust: “Some shops were already not doing well before the corona crisis and the current drop in sales is the final blow.”

Head of Lübeck Management, an association that encourages local urban development, Kempke blames a boom in suburban shopping centres for siphoning off shoppers and ever higher commercial rents which “have grabbed merchants by the throat”.

Christmas lights being set up in Lübeck at the end of November. Photo: DPA

Cash for town planning

Another big driver out of urban commercial districts is online shopping, a
sector given a huge lift from the pandemic. Sales in Germany are expected to soar by a third for November-December compared to one year ago.

That growth will come at the expense of shops that do not offer internet purchases, the German Retail Federation (HDE) said, fearing the closure of
50,000 stores due to Covid-19.

The lockdown of high-street shops in the all-important Christmas season is
expected to cost them €16.9 billion for November-December alone, the IW economic institute said.

READ ALSO: How can Germany save its high streets amid corona crisis?

The tighter rules from mid-December until mid-January and probably beyond are certain to push merchants further into the red.

Economy Minister Peter Altmaier said in November that shopping at small businesses was akin to “a national task, even a patriotic act”, a message that quickly rang hollow as shops were forced to bring down their shutters.

The federal government has dramatically ramped up spending to try to ease
the pain and is thrashing out a new e-commerce tax whose revenues would flow to high-street traders.

It has earmarked an additional €25 million for 2021 to shore up city centres.

The HDE is calling for an annual “urban emergency fund” of around €1.5 billion that would rejuvenate cities in the longer term.

“If we're not careful, we won't recognise our cities after the pandemic,” HDE president Gerd Landsberg said. “We must take action.”

The emergency government assistance comes in addition to the construction ministry's programme, created in 2002, to inject some €790 million annually to boost urban redevelopment.

Since then, 1,081 German cities and towns have benefited.

A tourist in Lübeck's scenic city centre in spring 2019. Photo: DPA 

'Spaces for life'

Hanau in the western state of Hesse was one of the first to profit from the scheme.

The city, whose landscape bore the dreary mark of hasty post-war architecture, has had a major facelift with a re-greening drive and improved access for those with reduced mobility.

Hanau built a mall popular with shoppers but filled it with independent stores and restaurants instead of the usual chain franchises, and installed a new public square.

READ ALSO: Job fears grow in Germany as coronavirus closes shops again

It's a success story, said Frank Schwartze, an urban planning professor at
Lübeck's Technical University, calling for the state funds to allow “city centres to adapt for new uses” to create “spaces for life” and not just consumption.

“The old retail commerce is not coming back,” he said, calling for “places
to walk and socialise” while making other “forms of mobility possible”. In other words, fewer parking spots and more space for pedestrians, cyclists and scooters.

Lübeck has just in the past year started on a similar path with a few novelties including a community garden in the heart of town, widened sidewalks with places to sit, open-air cultural exhibitions and streets closed to vehicles.

“We noticed a return of people on foot and a 60 percent reduction in car traffic,” said mayor Jan Lindenau.

“And citizens have gained in quality of life.”

By David Courbet

Member comments

  1. I would say that a further problem aggravated by the Corona crisis is that many German cities are rooted in the twin bedevilment of an almost closed-shop high rent burocracy and classic town planning conservativism as regards any change in the status quo; coupled with an inflexibility of business model that means that many businesses can only function on one level and one level only. This is especially true where there is accumulated money in the South. It all works fine until it no longer works at all, is pretty much the National business model. There is no flexibility and no dynamism.

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HEALTH

Could there be a new wave of Covid-19 in Germany this autumn?

It’s back again: amid sinking temperatures, the incidence of Covid-19 has been slowly rising in Germany. But is this enough to merit worrying about the virus?

Could there be a new wave of Covid-19 in Germany this autumn?

More people donning face masks in supermarkets, friends cancelling plans last minute due to getting sick with Covid-19. We might have seen some of those familiar reminders recently that the coronavirus is still around, but could there really be a resurgence of the virus like we experienced during the pandemic years?

According to virologists, the answer seems to be ‘maybe’: since July, the number of people newly infected with Covid-19 has been slowly rising from a very low level.

According to the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), nine people per 100,000 inhabitants became newly infected in Germany last week. A year ago, there were only around 270 reported cases.

Various Corona variants are currently on the loose in the country. According to the RKI,  the EG.5 (also called Eris) and XBB.1.16 lines were each detected in the week ending September 3rd with a share of just under 23 percent. 

The highly mutated variant BA.2.86 (Pirola), which is currently under observation by the World Health Organisation (WHO), also arrived in the country this week, according to RKI. 

High number of unreported case

The RKI epidemiologists also warned about a high number of unreported cases since hardly any testing is done. They pointed out that almost half of all registered sewage treatment plants report an increasing viral load in wastewater tests.

The number of hospital admissions has also increased slightly, but are still a far cry from the occupation rate amid the pandemic. Last week it was two per 100,000 inhabitants. In the intensive care units, only 1.2 percent of all beds are occupied by Covid-19 patients.

Still, a good three-quarters (76.4 percent) of people in Germany have been vaccinated at least twice and thus have basic immunity, reported RKI. 

Since Monday, doctors’ offices have been vaccinating with the adapted vaccine from Biontech/Pfizer, available to anyone over 12 years old, with a vaccine for small children set to be released the following week and one for those between 5 and 11 to come out October 2nd.

But Health Minister Karl Lauterbach has so far only recommended that people over 60 and those with pre-existing conditions get vaccinated.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED: Who should get a Covid jab this autumn in Germany?

“The pandemic is over, the virus remains,” he said. “We cannot predict the course of coming waves of corona, but it is clear that older people and people with pre-existing conditions remain at higher risk of becoming severely ill from Covid-19”

The RKI also recommended that people with a cold voluntarily wear a mask. Anyone exhibiting cough, cold, sore throat or other symptoms of a respiratory illness should voluntarily stay at home for three to five days and take regular corona self-tests. 

However, further measures such as contact restrictions are not necessary, he said.

One of many diseases

As of this autumn, Covid-19 could be one of many respiratory diseases. As with influenza, there are no longer absolute infection figures for coronavirus.

Saarbrücken pharmacist Thorsten Lehr told German broadcaster ZDF that self-protection through vaccinations, wearing a mask and getting tested when symptoms appear are prerequisites for surviving the Covid autumn well. 

Only a new, more aggressive mutation could completely turn the game around, he added.

On April 7th of this year, Germany removed the last of its over two-year long coronavirus restrictions, including mask-wearing in some public places.

READ ALSO: German doctors recommend Covid-19 self-tests amid new variant

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