Prague battles with the consequences of overtourism

Although the 8 million tourists who visit Prague every year are a boon to the city’s economy, there is a downside to the influx. The city recently banned organized pub crawls, but other negative impacts go unchecked.

It’s just before 6 p.m. on a fine fall weekday evening in Prague, the capital of the Czech Republic (Czechia). A crowd has gathered near the Old Town Hall in the city center. It looks as if a huge protest march is about to get underway.

But appearances are deceptive. The thousands of people standing close together have not come to demonstrate, but are waiting for Prague’s world-famous medieval astronomical clock to strike the hour.

When it does, the tourists — who descend on Prague from all over the world — will whip out their cell phones to capture the popular spectacle, which includes a golden cockerel, a skeleton striking the time and a procession of figures representing the 12 apostles.

“It’s wonderful; it was really worth the wait; a fantastic experience,” says George, a 40-year-old tourist from Chicago. Prague is one of five stops on his two-week European tour.

Illusion of infinite space

Elsewhere in the city center, more tourists are standing in a long line outside Prague’s municipal library. They are not here to admire the building, which houses one of the largest working libraries in the country, or to peruse the bookshelves.

They have come to see the Idiom book tower, an installation by Slovak artist Matej Kren comprising about 8,000 books in the entrance hall. Inside the tower of books are two mirrors that create the illusion of an infinite space.

The installation, which is also known as the “Column of Knowledge,” has been here since 1998. For many years, it went largely unnoticed by tourists, with just the occasional visitor stopping to take a look inside.

The ‘Lonely Planet’ effect

But when it was mentioned in a popular English-language travel guide, everything changed. It soon appeared in many other guides and began cropping up on social media.

These are just two of many instances where the Old Town of Prague is struggling with the impact of overtourism.

Also known as the Golden City, the Czech capital is one of the most popular tourist destinations in Europe, described in many guidebooks as the continent’s most beautiful city.

Recently, however, the city authorities decided to crack down on one of the worst manifestations of overtourism plaguing the capital: organized evening pub crawls, which have been available in the city for several years.

Visitors pay a fixed price to visit numerous pubs in a group and drink as much as they want. Such tours are now banned between the hours of 10 p.m. and 6 a.m.

“I think that in doing so, we have at last brought some nighttime relief to city residents. Prague is a place for anyone who behaves decently and considerately,” city councilor Jiri Pospisil told DW.

Many city center residents are delighted with the ban, which came into force in mid-October.

In summer in particular, I often had to call the police at 3 a.m. because of these groups. When a group of 30 drunk people settles down beneath your window in the middle of the road, it’s unbearable,” says Tomas Vich, an architect who lives on the top floor of a building behind the Church of Our Lady before Tyn in the Old Town.

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