11
september
2023
|
14:36
Europe/Amsterdam

Geen komkommertijd voor Ko Koens

cruise

For English press here.

Ook in de rustige zomermaanden wisten de internationale media lector New Urban Tourism Ko Koens te vinden. Hij werd geïnterviewd door The New York Times over het voornemen van de Amsterdamse gemeenteraad om het aanmeren van cruiseschepen in de binnenstad, bij de Passenger Terminal Amsterdam vlak naast het Centraal Station, niet langer toe te staan. Dit om af te rekenen met de vervuiling en het grote aantal toeristen die de ruim honderd cruiseschepen die jaarlijks Amsterdam aandoen met zich meebrengen.

En ook non-profit online magazine Reasons to be Cheerful wilde de visie van Ko graag horen in een artikel over de strategie van Barcelona om overtoerisme te bestrijden.

 

The New York Times: “Party time is over”
Ko Koens zegt in het artikel :

“Amsterdam prides itself on being a very open and tolerant city, but residents felt that the open attitude was being abused by tourists. Covid showed residents how quiet the city could be, and now Amsterdam wanted to send a message: ‘Party time is over’.”

Ko Koens, lector New Urban Tourism, Hogeschool Inholland

“City residents take a dim view of cruise ship tourists, who come in large groups for short visits that do not generate as much for local businesses as those who stay longer. The Venice scenario is what every city fears.”

Ko Koens, lector New Urban Tourism, Hogeschool Inholland
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Reasons to be cheerful: “Barcelona’s bold strategy”

In het artikel zijn de volgende quotes van Ko opgenomen:

“The city decided to open up. Barcelona reinvented itself as a tourism city, a city for the visitor economy, and introduced much more tourist-friendly policies.”

Ko Koens, lector New Urban Tourism, Hogeschool Inholland

“The meteoric rise of tourism in Barcelona dates back to when the Catalan city hosted the Olympic Games in 1992, according to Ko Koens, professor of New Urban Tourism at Rotterdam’s Inholland University of Applied Sciences.”

Ko Koens, lector New Urban Tourism, Hogeschool Inholland

“By trying to just restrict tourism, it won’t solve the problem. We’ve seen tourists as consumers, their value is always defined in economic terms. It’s no surprise tourists act like that. But that relationship can change. We need to stimulate visitors to contribute to the qualities of the place rather than just act as consumers.”

Ko Koens, lector New Urban Tourism, Hogeschool Inholland