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Barcelona removes route from Google Maps to keep tourists off local bus

Barcelona's city council has taken rather cunning measures to ensure that locals can use a bus route that has become overcrowded with tourists in the Catalan capital: remove it from Google Maps entirely.

Barcelona removes route from Google Maps to keep tourists off local bus
Tourists dominating the 116 bus route were using the line to visit Park Güell in Barcelona. Photo: PAU BARRENA/AFP.

Barcelona’s city council has deleted a busy bus route from Google Maps after years of complaints from locals about tourists dominating the service.

The 116 bus has been removed from the recommended routes feature on the app, a travel mainstay of tourists when visiting a new city. The hope is that by doing so, less tourists in the Catalan capital will be aware of it and there will be more seats available for locals who need the service to go about their daily lives.

The bus, which covers the Park Güell area of the city, was once a small, local neighbourhood service with capacity for around 20 passengers. But since it appeared on Google Maps as one of the main means of transport to Park Güell, one of Barcelona’s key tourist attractions, large groups of tourists began using it and the 116 service lost its main function, which is to take locals to areas of their neighbourhood with few transport connections.

READ ALSO: Why does hatred of tourists in Spain appear to be on the rise?

Neighbourhood organisations had been protesting for years. Initially the council increased the frequency of buses, to the point where it became the route with the most buses in circulation in the entire city, but even this did little to stop the wave of tourists using it. More buses passed by, but locals couldn’t find a seat (or even a space) on them.

Then the local council had the idea to stop tourists knowing about the route: remove it from Google Maps entirely. City Councillor Albert Batlle said back in February the council was looking for ways to “eliminate it from mapping tools and other internet references,” and free up space for locals.

Locals weren’t sure it would work. “At first we laughed… we thought it was absurd, like putting gates on a field,” Cesca Sánchez, from La Salut and Sanllehy Neighbourhood Association, told Spanish daily El Diario. But, she says, “the measure is being effective”.

Since the 116 disappeared from Google Maps, tourists no longer dominate the bus and the route serves locals again, she says.

It seems to have worked, and locals are happy. “It’s been disappearing from Google and changing radically,” says one bus driver familiar with the long-term “anger” of locals.

However, neighbours now fear that lines 24 and V19, which follow similar routes, will become overcrowded. But drivers on these routes, when consulted by El Diario, say that the numbers of tourists are more sustainable as they are buses on the conventional city-wide network, which have greater seats and capacity numbers.

This comes amid growing anti-tourist and more general anti-foreigner sentiment in Spain. With short-term tourist rentals pushing up prices and forcing many locals out of their neighbourhoods, different legislation restricting Airbnb-style rentals has already been introduced in recent years in numerous cities such as Valencia, Palma, Seville, Tarifa, Madrid, Barcelona, and San Sebastián, with varying degrees of success.

READ MORE: Where in Spain do locals ‘hate’ tourists?

Anti-tourist graffiti has popped up around the country, suggesting foreigners go home.

The story of the 116 bus route in Barcelona shows that it’s not just rental costs and access to housing that is affected by mass tourism — local infrastructure can also suffer and needs increasingly extreme measures to preserve it for locals.

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POLITICS

Catalan separatist kingpin refuses to give up on ruling despite ‘pro-Spain win’

Catalan separatist leader Carles Puigdemont said Monday he would seek to form a pro-independence minority government in the Spanish region despite a weekend electoral setback which saw Sánchez's Socialists win.

Catalan separatist kingpin refuses to give up on ruling despite 'pro-Spain win'

Spain’s governing Socialist Party won a regional election in Catalonia on Sunday, snatching away separatist parties’ majority.

But Puigdemont insisted he was still in a position to rally pro-independence groups and form a regional government.

READ MORE: Eight things we learnt from the Catalan election results

“We can assemble a coherent majority,” added Puigdemont, who lives abroad in exile to escape trial for leading a botched independence bid in 2017.

“Not an absolute one, but a coherent one, bigger than the one the Socialist Party candidate can gather,” added Puigdemont, leader of the centre-right hardline separatist party JxCat.

“We are going to concentrate on that from now on.”

He said he envisaged standing as a candidate for leader in a vote in the new Catalan regional parliament.

The Socialists won 42 of the regional parliament’s 135 seats on Sunday — nine more than in the previous election in 2021, but short of an absolute majority.

Analysts say the Socialists could ally with the radical left Comuns Sumar, which won six seats, and moderate independence party ERC, which won 20.

JxCat, ERC and the smaller hard-left CUP secured 59 seats between them, compared with 74 last time.

Puigdemont insisted the independence parties had “potentially more options” for winning office.

PROFILE: Carles Puigdemont, Spain’s separatist kingmaker

He said he had been in touch with ERC to discuss creating “a pro-sovereignty government”.

Puigdemont spoke in Argelès-sur-Mer, a few kilometres (miles) from the Spanish border.

Ahead of the vote, he had pledged to retire from politics if he lost.

Sunday’s result offered a boost to Spain’s Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.

He had wanted to show that his policy of defusing tensions triggered by the 2017 crisis had worked, reducing pro-independence sentiment in the wealthy northeastern region of eight million people.

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