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MILAN

‘Cities should rest’: How Milan is cracking down on noisy nightlife

Milan's mayor has moved to limit outside drinking in the busy Porta Venezia nightlife area as the city struggles with noise and rising crime rates.

'Cities should rest': How Milan is cracking down on noisy nightlife
Downtown Milan is known for its lively nightlife, but will a new ordinance from the mayor's office change that? (Photo by Miguel MEDINA / AFP)

The new rules, contained in an ordinance signed by Mayor Giuseppe Sala last month, prohibit the sale of alcohol to be drunk outdoors from midnight to 6am on weekdays and from 1.30am to 6am on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays on the lively streets of via Melzo, via Lazzaretto and piazza Oberdan.

The restrictions came into force on Friday October 20th, applying to bars with outdoor tables as well as to shops, vending machines and stalls which sell drinks.

Street vendors are also prohibited from selling food and alcoholic and nonalcoholic drinks from 6pm to 6am.

The ban came in amid concerns about safety in the city centre, as well as about how noise levels affect people living in the area.

“This idea of ​​the 24-hour city in which there are no opening hours and [things are] always open, no longer satisfies me so much,” Sala said, according to news agency Ansa.

“I believe cities should rest too like us humans and have timetables that are a little more suitable for everyone.”

READ ALSO: Milan announces plan to ban cars from city centre in 2024

Marco Granelli, Milan’s safety councillor, added: “We do not want to penalise fun or work and entrepreneurial activities, but we must allow residents to rest and everyone to use public spaces in safety.”

Safety is a hot political topic in Milan, which has long been the city with the highest crime rate in Italy. The crime rate increased by 3.5 percent in 2022, according to the most recent statistics from the interior ministry, published by financial newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore.

However, not everyone in the area was happy with the mayor’s move.

Elena Montafia, president of the Lazzaretto neighbourhood committee, told the Milanese edition of Corriere della Sera that the ordinance was “completely ineffective” as noise levels will still be higher than the recommended 55 decibels even with the ban.

“We don’t want to wage war on the locals, but a municipality should take responsibility if its citizens live in these conditions,” she said.

“Closing the outdoor areas half an hour early on weekends, unfortunately, does not address the problem in the slightest.”

OPINION: Why Milan is a much better city to live in than Rome

Paolo Sassi of Leccomilano, a local bar, also expressed frustrations, saying a pact had already been made and kept with councillors to have areas closed by 2am.

“Today, however, we have to remove the outside areas, but can remain open inside until 3am. What’s the point of all this disturbance in the street, if real police checks are not carried out throughout the area?”

This is not the first time Sala has called for a ban on drinking outside after hours. In July 2022 he prohibited the sale of takeaway drinks between 10pm and 5am in the city centre.

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MILAN

Milan approves new rules cracking down on noisy nightlife

Milan city council on Monday confirmed new rules aimed at limiting noise from nightlife in the city, with restrictions on the sale of alcohol - but no ban on late-night gelato, as was initially reported.

Milan approves new rules cracking down on noisy nightlife

New legislation aimed at stopping noise from Milan’s nightlife from keeping residents awake will come into force in 12 of the city’s central districts from Monday, May 20th, remaining in place until November 4th.

READ ALSO: Milan announces plan to ban cars from city centre in 2024

Milan’s city council published an ordinance on Monday containing details of the much-debated temporary limit on the opening hours of outdoor terraces, takeaways and other food and drinks businesses, which it said would improve the lives of local residents without hitting business owners in the pocket.

According to the local edition of Corriere della Sera, the new rules limit:

  • Opening hours of bar and restaurant terraces, which must close no later than 1am and reopen no earlier than 6am. The limit is extended to 2am on Friday and Saturday nights.
  • Sales of takeaway alcoholic drinks from bars, shops and other businesses, which are prohibited between midnight and 6am.
  • Sales of food and drinks by street vendors between 8pm and 6pm.

The rules will apply in the areas of Nolo, Lazzaretto, Melzo, Isola, Sarpi, Cesariano, Arco della Pace, Corso Como/Gae Aulenti, Garibaldi, Brera, Ticinese, Darsena and Navigli, according to local media reports.

While initial reports ridiculed the measure as an “ice-cream ban”, councillors later clarified that “ice cream is not the target” and that the rules would focus on the sale of “drinks, especially alcoholic ones.”

OPINION: Why Milan is a much better city to live in than Rome

This was the latest set of temporary restrictions brought in by Milan’s city council, and follows the introduction of similar rules last October on weekends in the busy areas of via Melzo, via Lazzaretto and piazza Oberdan.

Previously introduced limits were criticised as ineffective by residents’ associations, who said noise levels would remain above safe limits, as well as business owners, who pointed out that many bars in central areas of the city already had an agreement in place to close outdoor terraces no later than 2am.

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