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- <text id=91TT1645>
- <title>
- July 29, 1991: Elbow-to-Elbow at the Louvre
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 29, 1991 The World's Sleaziest Bank
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 30
- TOURISM
- Elbow-to-Elbow at the Louvre
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Overcrowding, pollution and plain incivility have become Europe'
- unwelcome summer guests
- </p>
- <p>By Marguerite Johnson--Reported by Anne Constable/London,
- Leonora Dodsworth/Rome and Victoria Foote-Greenwell/Paris
- </p>
- <p> Costantino Federico, the mayor of Capri, has had enough.
- The hordes of tourists who inundate the Mediterranean isle
- every summer will no longer be permitted to lounge around the
- famed piazzetta. Nor can they camp outdoors in sleeping bags,
- walk around in noisy wooden sandals or loiter bare-torsoed in
- public places. Farther north, on the island of Ponza, a favorite
- vacation spot for Romans, officials have banned automobiles
- until the end of August. The last straw, say residents, was the
- hundreds of cars that rolled off the ferries from the mainland
- every day last summer, choking the narrow roads and causing
- loathsome pollution and noise.
- </p>
- <p> The prehistoric Lascaux caves in France's Dordogne region
- were closed in 1963 because the presence of tourists was
- destroying the 17,000-year-old paintings on their walls. Now
- Lascaux II, a replica built nearby in 1983 to give visitors a
- sense of the Cro-Magnon artwork, has become so overcrowded that
- entry is limited to 2,000 a day. The great Cathedral of Notre
- Dame in the heart of Paris has yet to take such extreme
- measures, but it may soon have to: more than 11.5 million people
- visited the church last year to admire its Gothic architecture
- and rose windows.
- </p>
- <p> Such throngs not only create wear and tear on the
- cathedral floor but, with that many people simply breathing,
- even raise the humidity to damaging levels. "I've actually seen
- rivulets of condensation running down the stained-glass
- windows," says Christian Dupavillon, director of patrimony for
- the French Ministry of Culture. Even the tourist industry is
- alarmed. "Will we have to create a Notre Dame II similar to the
- replica they were forced to build at Lascaux?" asked the trade
- daily Le Quotidien de Tourisme in an editorial.
- </p>
- <p> Britain's most hallowed sites are having similar problems.
- The dean of St. Paul's Cathedral in London announced that
- visitors will have to pay a $3.25 entrance fee, after the church
- had to spend $150,000 to repair its rare black-and-gold marble
- floor. The surface had been damaged by salt and grit tracked in
- by tourists wearing sneakers. And forget about stopping at
- Westminster Abbey, even on a Sunday morning, for a few quiet
- moments of prayer. "Now it's like Harrods three days before
- Christmas," says cultural historian John Julius Norwich.
- "Salisbury Cathedral is just as bad. The whole atmosphere is
- gone. You can't see anything, and people are talking in 20
- different languages."
- </p>
- <p> From the cobblestoned streets of Bath, where angry Britons
- turned hoses on tour buses grinding through their neighborhoods
- last summer, to the sinking shores of Venice, where visitors on
- a summer Sunday often number 100,000, overcrowding, pollution
- and plain incivility have become unwelcome guests. Europeans in
- particular are realizing that tourism has got out of hand. This
- year alone more than 400 million people around the globe will
- travel abroad. By the year 2000, the number will be 650 million.
- And those figures do not include the millions who go
- sight-seeing in their own countries.
- </p>
- <p> In times past, putting up with litter, noxious fumes and
- bad manners seemed an acceptable price to pay for the revenue
- tourism brought in and the jobs it created. A big business it
- is too. In Britain the tourist industry contributed $39 billion
- to the economy last year. Italy took in $21 billion. France, the
- world's second most favored destination after the U.S.,
- collected $17.7 billion from tourism, more than it earned from
- agriculture or arms. For poorer countries like Greece, tourism
- is the main source of foreign exchange, so a drop in the number
- of visitors, which is feared this year because of the gulf war
- and the crisis in neighboring Yugoslavia, is economically
- painful.
- </p>
- <p> But increasingly, ordinary citizens as well as public
- officials and cultural guardians are beginning to believe that
- the costs may outweigh the benefits. Jobs generated by tourism
- in hotels, restaurants and parks, while in demand among local
- people, are usually at the low end of the pay scale. The biggest
- beneficiaries of tourist spending are developers and owners, who
- often take their profits out of town and, if they are
- foreigners, out of the country as well. Even the tourist
- industry is starting to recognize that threatened treasures must
- be protected or business will not survive. As London's Daily
- Telegraph put it in an editorial, "Unless tourism is brought
- under firmer discipline, it will destroy itself. We think we are
- within measurable distance of killing the goose which lays the
- golden eggs."
- </p>
- <p> In point of fact, monuments and scenic spots all over
- Britain are under virtual siege, with 18 million visitors
- pouring in every year. In the Lake District the National Trust
- has spent more than $2 million repairing erosion of public
- footpaths. Residents of Bath have trouble reaching their shops
- on summer Saturdays because of tourists descending on the town
- to see the Royal Crescent and the Roman baths. In North Devon
- 370,000 visitors a year overwhelm the picturesque harbor of
- Clovelly (pop. 400). Sometimes they even wander into private
- homes.
- </p>
- <p> The story is much the same elsewhere in Europe. Alpine
- forests in Austria and Switzerland have been denuded to make way
- for ski runs and cable cars. For the Conservatoire du Littoral,
- the French agency charged with preserving the Mediterranean
- coastline, the grossly overdeveloped French Riviera is the
- sorriest example of tourism gone awry. Not only has the
- coastline been ravaged by urbanization and the sea severely
- polluted, but tourism was down 30% last year from 1989.
- Pollution and overcrowding also figured in a similar drop in
- tourist revenues in Spain.
- </p>
- <p> Greece took steps years ago to halt further deterioration
- of its antiquities. Planes are barred from flying over Athens,
- and tourists are no longer permitted to walk into the
- Parthenon, Athena's exquisite temple atop the Acropolis. Still,
- with as many as 6,000 visitors a day clambering up the
- Acropolis, some parts of its rock have become so slippery and
- dangerous that officials have had to cover them with concrete.
- Marble treasures in the museum have been blackened by tourists'
- greasy hands. Officialdom can also be difficult: although buses
- have not been allowed on the Acropolis since the mid-1970s, it
- took until this year to persuade the mayor that it was just as
- bad to let them park at the foot of the hill, since many drivers
- leave their motors running to keep the air conditioning going.
- </p>
- <p> Conservationists and local residents have managed to stop
- some developments. Last summer scores of people took to
- France's Gardon River in canoes to protest a government project
- that would have brought motorized trains, parking lots, a
- museum and even a shopping arcade close to the historic Pont du
- Gard, a 2,000-year-old Roman aqueduct near Remoulins. The Pont
- already draws more than 2 million visitors a year. Historians,
- environmentalists and locals also joined forces against a
- commercial project planned for Chambord, one of the most
- illustrious of the Loire Valley chateaus. The castle was
- scheduled to become the site of a "Renaissance" theme park, with
- two hotels, shops, an artificial lake and a tower with a
- revolving restaurant at the top.
- </p>
- <p> The solutions, like the problems, are rarely simple. At
- Stonehenge, the English Heritage, a commission created to help
- preserve ancient monuments, is seeking to close a public highway
- to reduce pollution and enhance the site. But residents are up
- in arms because the closure will force them out of their way to
- shop. "There is a thing worth preserving as much as Stonehenge--and that is community life," says Amy Hall, a resident. "If
- we lived in the South American jungle, you'd be saying, `Save
- the natives.' We're the natives here." The Rev. Robert Runcie,
- retired Archbishop of Canterbury, goes even further, charging
- that tourism "creates pollution, prostitution, economic
- exploitation and disregard for indigenous life-styles."
- </p>
- <p> Something has indeed been lost. Only 10 years ago,
- travelers in Greece or Turkey would have been invited into
- peasant homes, offered an ouzo or a handful of ripe plums. Even
- in remote villages now, such hospitality--the essence of what
- travel to another culture is about--is pretty much a thing of
- the past. Says historian Norwich: "Tourism brutalizes.
- Self-respect gives way to servility, good manners to surliness,
- and hospitality to cupidity and suspicion." To try to educate
- tourists to be more sensitive travelers, the World Wildlife Fund
- has put out a series of booklets on ways to avoid abusing the
- environment.
- </p>
- <p> For those who feel guilty about lying on a Mediterranean
- beach, there are other things to do. The British travel firm of
- Eco Holidays, for example, is offering a trip to assist in
- woodland preservation in Romania. But John Button, author of The
- Green Guide to England, may have the ultimate solution. The
- "truly aware," says he, will not go on holiday at all.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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