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‘Gentrified out of existence’: Madrid protest adds weight to Spain’s anti-tourism wave

Spain's anti-mass tourism wave arrived in Madrid on Saturday when locals took to the streets of the working-class Lavapiés area to protest against rent speculation and other policies turning their 'barrio' into a "museum neighbourhood".

'Gentrified out of existence': Madrid protest adds weight to Spain's anti-tourism wave
Protest poster reads "Lavapiés at the limit", "against the destruction of neighbourhoods, we're staying!".

Residents of the central, multicultural neighbourhood of Lavapiés in Madrid took to their streets on Saturday to demonstrate against the ‘destruction of their neighbourhood’ and to demand better regulation of tourist accommodation.

Many fear that if nothing is done, Lavapiés will become a “museum neighbourhood and not for the people” who live there.

The demonstration was called against unregulated tourist accommodation, particularly the proliferation of illegal holiday rentals and their impact on rising house prices, as well as buildings bought by vulture capital funds, the lack of green spaces and facilities for children and the elderly, as well as police harassment of migrants in the area.

Citing a spokesperson for the Madrid Tenants’ Union, Spanish daily El Diario reports that in Madrid there are “almost 17,000 illegal tourist flats”.

READ ALSO: Madrid to suspend holiday-let licences as rent prices spiral

Leah Pattem, journalist and founder of the Madrid No Frills website, told The Local: “I’ve lived in Lavapiés for more than 10 years and, in this time, I’ve seen a lot of change.”

“You have always been able to hear multiple languages being spoken on the streets, often discussing local issues. But, in the last few years, especially since the pandemic, gentrification has become the core of the conversation, especially around police violence.”

Organised by 40 organisations under the slogan Lavapiés al límite (Lavapiés at the limit), protesters walked through the streets of the popular, multicultural neighbourhood, and stopped at various landmarks.

This comes amid growing concern around Spain about the socioeconomic impact of mass tourism on cities and locals. In recent weeks, there have been protests in Cantabria, Girona, the Balearics and the Canary Islands, with further demonstrations planned in Málaga.

READ ALSO: Mass protests in Spain’s Canary Islands decry overtourism

Organisers in Lavapiés were well aware of their place in the rising anti-tourism sentiment around the country. “After the Canary Islands, Cantabria and the Balearic Islands, it’s Madrid’s turn. The fuse is lit this Saturday in Lavapiés” was how the Tenant’s Union advertised the march on social media leading up to Saturday’s protest.

In particular, locals are unhappy about the number of short-term tourist rental properties. The increase in Airbnb properties, used by traditional tourists but increasingly remote workers and digital nomads, inflates the local property market and force locals out.

“Everything is ‘more Airbnb, more Airbnb, more Airbnb, more Airbnb’ one local, Teresa Ortiz, told El Diario, adding that her rent had increased by €150 in recent years.

Property speculation is also having an impact on local business. “The shops that open close in a month,” Ortiz said, warning against gentrification in the area.

Many locals, not only in Lavapiés but in cities across the country, fear that local shops, often family run, are in danger of being bought out and turned into Airbnbs or trendy coffee shops catering for the tourists and remote workers that stay in the accommodation taking over the neighbourhood.

“There are thousands of individual tourist apartments, many of which are visible as they’re on street level, that have replaced local businesses,” Pattem said.

READ ALSO: Why Madrid is struggling with its explosion of illegal holiday lets

“We are also experiencing daily evictions, for example, the entire building of Calle Tribulete 7 has been purchased by a vulture fund. We have at least eight entire blocks in the neighbourhood in the same situation,” she added.

“We just want a neighbourhood for the neighbours, and for Almeida, the right-wing mayor of Madrid, to stop gentrifying us out of existence.”

READ ALSO:

Anti-tourist sentiments, sometimes verging on anti-wealthy foreigner sentiment, appears to be the rise in Spain, with everything from gentrification, rent increases caused by the rise in profitable holiday lets and the feeling that residents are becoming second-class citizens in their own cities all getting bundled together into a complex issue.

Tourism has long made up a significant proportion of Spain’s economy, and provides employment for many Spaniards. Often the gripe is not with the traditional ‘hotel on the coast’ model of tourism, but in the post-pandemic period the frustration has increasingly been, firstly, with the sheer numbers of tourists coming to Spain (the country welcomed over 84 million visitors last year) but also the rise of tourist rental accommodation in Spain’s major cities.

As more and more landlords turf out their tenants and turn their properties into Airbnbs, the housing stock available to locals not only decreases in terms of availability but increases in terms of price. In the increasingly online post-pandemic world of work, these properties are taken by tourists or remote workers, often with higher foreign salaries and spending power, usually from Northern Europe or the US.

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TOURISM

Barcelona to get rid of all tourist rental flats ‘by 2028’

The mayor of Barcelona announced on Friday that the city will bring an end to 10,000 tourist flats by 2028 simply by not renewing licences.

Barcelona to get rid of all tourist rental flats 'by 2028'

Barcelona city council has pledged to ‘eliminate’ the more than 10,000 tourist flats in the Catalan capital.

Jaume Collboni, the city’s Socialist mayor, made the announcement during a press conference on Friday afternoon. 

The plan is to rid the city of all the tourist flats by November 2028 by not renewing any of the 10,101 licences in the city.

READ ALSO: ‘It kills the city’: Barcelona’s youth protest against mass tourism

They will instead be used for residential properties, applying a decree law approved by the Generalitat which regulates tourist housing.

“We’ve decided to go all out to convert them into residential housing,” Collboni said.

Collboni argued that the measure is a response to the growing difficulty of accessing affordable housing in Barcelona, where supply is scarce and rental prices have surpassed €1,100 per month on average.

According to figures cited during the press conference, the price of housing has increased by 68 percent in Barcelona in the last 10 years, while sales by just 38 percent. “The least that can be done is to think about how to provide more public and private housing. That means ‘more supply, more supply, more supply’,” Collboni said.

“The city has 10,000 tourist flats and we want to convert them into residential,” he added. “By November 2028, we want these 10,000 tourist flats to become residential. From 2029, the tourist flat as we know it today will disappear in Barcelona.”

Discontent among locals about the proliferation of short-term tourist rental flats has grown in the Catalan city in recent years. But it is not only in Barcelona. The sentiment has spread across the country in recent years, particularly in the post-pandemic period.

Protests have already been held in the Canary and Balearic Islands as well as Madrid and Barcelona, and demonstrations are planned in Málaga at the end of June.

READ ALSO: ‘It’s become unliveable’: Spain’s Málaga plans protests against mass tourism

A combination of dwindling rental market supply and rising prices, worsened by the rise in post-pandemic remote working, has meant that in many Spanish cities digital nomads and tourists dominate the city centres and price locals out of their own neighbourhoods.

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