COVID Has Exposed Venice's Housing Crisis

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  • Опубликовано: 15 янв 2021
  • The housing crisis has gotten so bad in Venice that middle-class families are occupying abandoned public housing, in a city built for tourists.
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Комментарии • 909

  • @thomasroeder1
    @thomasroeder1 3 года назад +1488

    0:24 You know the situation is dire when an Italian uses instant coffee

    • @FC-hj9ub
      @FC-hj9ub 3 года назад +22

      That's chicoria based coffee, which exists mostly in instant form. No one has fresh chickoree coffee anymore

    • @laneythelame
      @laneythelame 3 года назад +2

      Omg so true

    • @silkegehtyoutubegarnichtsa892
      @silkegehtyoutubegarnichtsa892 3 года назад +1

      Hmm, she doesn't even know how to handle that (don't put it INTO the water/whatever it is actually, yikes!), me thinks she's never done that before, i.e. sucker alert. ;)

    • @gianmarcorusso1713
      @gianmarcorusso1713 3 года назад +18

      People have been drinking it for so long. Btw all the stereotypes about Italy are mostly about the Centre and the South. The North has a very different culture, way more "continental".

    • @dimmacommunication
      @dimmacommunication 3 года назад

      lol true

  • @DrumToTheBassWoop
    @DrumToTheBassWoop 3 года назад +448

    How far Venice has fallen, from a great Venetian maritime empire, to a glorified Italian theme park. 😐

    • @sootiermaple3546
      @sootiermaple3546 3 года назад +16

      We don’t have colonies or occupied territories anymore... it’s either that or starve. With the pandemic we even lost the lottle money foreigners woukd bring here.

    • @ofafak
      @ofafak 3 года назад +2

      theme park sure, try to buy a flat there.

    • @filippobonetto5757
      @filippobonetto5757 3 года назад +17

      Unfortunately Venice's business from the 11th century to the 18th century was profitable and possible, now it isn't. Globalization and technological development made it impossible to happen now. Times have changed and the only thing that venice could be was a stunning city of the past and so a tourist attraction. Nothing is forever and so is Venice, that beautiful and functioning empire couldn't last forever.

    • @FedeDiver1
      @FedeDiver1 3 года назад +2

      @P M well, most part of the world discend from them, still the more advanced one

    • @FedeDiver1
      @FedeDiver1 3 года назад +2

      @P M Kidding? USA, Australia, Central and South America...they are all strongly linked to Europe and their cultural influence, and even in other parts of the world you can see that...we all communicate in English, not Japanese or Bengali...European civilizations still represent the most extended and influential models, not the only ones but others haven't yet got to that point

  • @Sp0oney1
    @Sp0oney1 3 года назад +951

    I was in Venice end of 2018, it was filled with gazillion of tourists, the term "theme park" to refer Venice has some truth to it, sad to see the locals are left to fight on their own during these hard times.

    • @SpaceRanger187
      @SpaceRanger187 3 года назад +5

      It's not just Venice that it's happening to. If tickets etc were not so much people would go other places

    • @shannonnewman3091
      @shannonnewman3091 3 года назад +7

      Thank the ccp for the CCP virus that is spreading ," Made in china"

    • @djzrobzombie2813
      @djzrobzombie2813 3 года назад +18

      And still the locals charge more money for anything just because it's " Tourist area" ...they make money from the tourist even though with shitty service

    • @freedomordeath89
      @freedomordeath89 3 года назад +5

      Tourism makes up like 80% of Venice proper gdp, so yall stupid.

    • @quanbrooklynkid7776
      @quanbrooklynkid7776 3 года назад

      @@djzrobzombie2813 damn

  • @lac2275
    @lac2275 3 года назад +769

    The Disneyland parallel is quiet powerful.

    • @johnmchardy8530
      @johnmchardy8530 3 года назад +1

      It really is!

    • @kenster8270
      @kenster8270 3 года назад +4

      Bruges has the same challenge: Its historic city center gets swarmed by hoardes of tourists almost non-stop. But unlike Venice, regular people can live in residential areas surrounding the old city. Venice is built on islands, so they have no space for adjacent residential areas.

    • @mathhew7352
      @mathhew7352 3 года назад

      *quite

    • @gianmarcorusso1713
      @gianmarcorusso1713 3 года назад

      @@kenster8270 Venice is on the mainland too. The problem are not cities per se but their historical cores.

    • @03.ximipa3ahmadrinofarosmu3
      @03.ximipa3ahmadrinofarosmu3 3 года назад

      quite

  • @MarcoAurelio-ip1td
    @MarcoAurelio-ip1td 3 года назад +218

    Being from the area I can only testify and say that what Nicolò says is completely accurate. The government cares more about keeping the city a tourist centre rather than keeping it populated. When I walk around I can’t but see that more and more houses seem abandoned and left to disrepair. Nowadays living on the island is more of a luxury than anything else. Bot alas, it’s not only housing but there are a myriad of other problems connected with an excessive tourism, which unfortunately has been contributing to its decline. Just a year ago a cruise ship smashed into the harbour and there have been cases of uncaring visitors who go around littering, vandalising and in general disrespecting the city and its history. The irony is that, unfortunately, the city lives of tourism and I’m afraid that this will never change.

    • @FailedOrbits
      @FailedOrbits 3 года назад +3

      However... mayors are not poor victims in this as the guy wanted to make it seem... they have plenty of responsibilities. Also blaming Rome it so typical 🙄 thanks lega for this shitty attitude to blame others

    • @sapphirecamui6447
      @sapphirecamui6447 3 года назад +1

      but the city can do both....tourists and citizens. the mayor of the city just has to allow people to buy/rent those abandoned properties, on the condition to actually live in them for at least 5 years if not longer.

    • @JPrince-rl2bf
      @JPrince-rl2bf 3 года назад

      @@sapphirecamui6447 The solution isn't that easy. The local and state government know that I've residents came back to the city they will have to make it more habitable adding services and solving the problem of the high tides, which they "tried" to solve with The MOSE project which is now complete after more than 20 years of development and billions disappearing. Also, we might take into account that tourism brings more money than residents and that there might be some conflicts of interest for the politicians.

    • @sapphirecamui6447
      @sapphirecamui6447 3 года назад +1

      @@JPrince-rl2bf Ok, i won't disagree with you because i don't know the whole picture.
      I do think that tourism won't be the same as before the virus. But we'll have to wait and see.
      The big tides though, sounds like something not many people would want to deal with, especially when they're not used to this aspect. Personally i wouldn't.

    • @bogo_wanderlust3692
      @bogo_wanderlust3692 3 года назад

      instead of balming the voernment what does the regional government do...INO PARTICULA LEGA
      NORD??? SALVINI'S PARTY

  • @thepearlswirl
    @thepearlswirl 3 года назад +312

    Devastating. This is happening all over the world. I hate that things aren’t getting better.

    • @okramando
      @okramando 3 года назад +15

      It's going to get worse.

    • @uttcftptid4481
      @uttcftptid4481 3 года назад +13

      They will get better. Every country is three missed meals away from pulling out the pitchforks

    • @LEO-xo9cz
      @LEO-xo9cz 3 года назад +3

      Every western country will be imploded and turned into a communist model.

    • @jenster29
      @jenster29 3 года назад +2

      @@LEO-xo9cz only because we're letting it

    • @michable100
      @michable100 3 года назад +2

      @@LEO-xo9cz ah yes we have these problems because of capitalism,but somehow in your mind the problem is socialism.

  • @MadameCasper
    @MadameCasper 3 года назад +128

    This is how things are all over America. People sleep in cars, tents, and on the ground while thousands of places are empty. Its all about profit. It always has been.

    • @Ceez542
      @Ceez542 3 года назад +12

      Its just the way it is now unfortunately. Crony capitalism at its best

    • @freedomordeath89
      @freedomordeath89 3 года назад +13

      So... You are going to give away your house to an homeless, right? Or you just talk bullshit as everyone else?

    • @MadameCasper
      @MadameCasper 3 года назад +20

      @@freedomordeath89 you don't understand the process and thats ok but I'm not your teacher.

    • @SeekerofTruths
      @SeekerofTruths 3 года назад +25

      @@freedomordeath89 I only have one home. Why would anyone own more than one house when there are so many people without a home? Housing is a human right

    • @thomasgrabkowski8283
      @thomasgrabkowski8283 3 года назад +1

      This is actually global

  • @goldfinga786able
    @goldfinga786able 3 года назад +439

    THIS IS HAPPENING IN MANY COUNTRIES ...

    • @brendalynjones4576
      @brendalynjones4576 3 года назад +27

      All over the world right now,everywhere and it's so scary. I'm in Texas and I no so many people who are going thru this right now.bless them all.

    • @adamk4733
      @adamk4733 3 года назад +10

      @@brendalynjones4576 I’m in Texas too but it’s open for pretty much all business here so not exactly the same.

    • @GeneGrey337
      @GeneGrey337 3 года назад +14

      @@brendalynjones4576 It's the same here in New Jersey, rent keeps rising, the job market is very weak as well now and I know of people who have been leaving in droves. I can only speak from my experiences. 😥

    • @brendalynjones4576
      @brendalynjones4576 3 года назад +6

      @@adamk4733 it depends on where you are in texas tho. Rent keep rising and rising, so alot of people are getting effective here in texas, Texas is a big state so maybe not as bad as where you are at, but its definitely going on here. Especially since everyone and thier mama is moving down here cause the rent was low and houses weren't as expensive as other states were. Now they are real expensive now cause alot of people are moving here cause of job opportunities and now they jacking the rent up cause there is a high demand here, so alot of regular texans are suffering because of the rent is so dam expensive now. Especially in dallas were everyone is moving here.

    • @adamk4733
      @adamk4733 3 года назад

      @@brendalynjones4576 Just save up $$ and buy a property in 2022. If you’re established it’s not that hard plus you’d know the best areas to buy. You can put down as little as 5% if your a first time home buyer or haven’t bought in 5+ years. No excuses!

  • @lois6187
    @lois6187 3 года назад +408

    Where is the tax dollars received from hotels and tourism going? Not back into social programs it seems...

    • @minkyone
      @minkyone 3 года назад +64

      Unfortunatly, many hotel don't pay as much (or at all) as they should. There have been many scandals with foreing-owned hotels that did't pay a penny for years.

    • @RosettaStonerd
      @RosettaStonerd 3 года назад +20

      I presume a few rich people get that type of money and they are not all even Venitians... perhaps one good marketing campaign could promote the local businesses that invest part of their profits in the local communities... if there are any. I am sure there would be tons of tourists that preferred to be able to select their hotels and restaurants based on that...

    • @FrancyKanae93
      @FrancyKanae93 3 года назад +25

      A huge chunk of the revenue from tourism comes from Airbnb's and that is not really taxable. As long as Venice lives off of tourism alone and that cashflow relies on the gig economy, there's nothing left that goes to the State, or the city itself for that matter.

    • @FC-hj9ub
      @FC-hj9ub 3 года назад +2

      Prices are so low and taxes are so high many people don't trust giving their taxes to the government

    • @phobosdeimos1653
      @phobosdeimos1653 3 года назад +1

      In the pockets of ours corrupted politicians.

  • @arielschant9841
    @arielschant9841 3 года назад +63

    So people with children are literally on the street and the best thing the Mayor’s spokesperson could say was actually: “it’s someone elses’s fault”?! Wow. Disgraceful.

    • @MrJx4000
      @MrJx4000 3 года назад +3

      He should've said, "it's all Trump's fault." ;-)

    • @user-zt4ry9hm9u
      @user-zt4ry9hm9u 3 года назад

      Have you ever met an honest Italian?

    • @arielschant9841
      @arielschant9841 3 года назад +5

      @@user-zt4ry9hm9u idk what your comment was... but it’s not funny. Italians are wonderfully resourceful people, they are hardworking, tough and great at studying, which they have demonstrated to the world in multiple historical occasions.

    • @accade_acaso
      @accade_acaso 3 года назад +4

      @@user-zt4ry9hm9u you should think about who you think you are.

    • @jjpp2216
      @jjpp2216 2 года назад +1

      I hear you, and yet if you spend ANY time in Italy you know there’s truth to this. The country revels in a bureaucracy that is unimaginable anywhere, including in a time machine in communist era Russia. A simple act (getting a phone line, buying a train pass as a local) is mired in a lifetime of bureaucracy. Italy is like a country run by the DMV.
      And bear in mind that, insofar as any effort to penetrate bureaucracy, Venice is tiny. 50,000 people (and falling), most of them over 65, trying to move the bureaucracy of Rome? That’s like a senior’s home in Duluth, Minnesota running the UN.

  • @ursuspovo
    @ursuspovo 3 года назад +8

    I live in Venice. The pandemic emptied the city from tourism, and seriously damaged the local economy. But It also showed another Venice, beyond the overpriced tourist traps and the plastic carnival masks. Now I can finally notice Venetians, chatting in bars or simply buying groceries from local shops. I see the university students, that always had been a consistent part of the local population. This town is not dead without tourists. The economy was hit hard from the lack of them, but we can create a better kind of tourism. If you can afford to move with your job, when it will be possible, I invite you to come over for a long stay. There are cheap options to do so (mostly on the mainland, but that's not too bad), and Venice deserves to be enjoyed over a long stay. The lagoon is an astoundingly rich environment for its nature, art, and people. You will find over 1500 years of history, literally at every corner. You will also find amazing food and wine (food in Venice is much more than the frozen food served in restaurants near Rialto bridge). Our present is to live in cities made expensive and unhabitable by short term rentals, but I hope that in the future they will become a place for those who want to live in them.

  • @self-aware5825
    @self-aware5825 3 года назад +304

    Ever met a wealthy person who said "no thanks I'm finished, this is more than enough wealth for one family"? Think you ever will?

    • @gGBb27
      @gGBb27 3 года назад +16

      yes, bill gates comes to mind. guy is so freaking wealthy he's donating bns I think; warren buffett is another giving away 99% of his wealth.
      But I have met lazy people demanding others satisfy their needs just because in comparison they are poor for no good reason

    • @n.e.g.u.s
      @n.e.g.u.s 3 года назад +21

      typing “no good reason” makes it look like you don’t think deeply enough to provide an answer for an obviously complex issue

    • @gGBb27
      @gGBb27 3 года назад +6

      @@n.e.g.u.s oh yes of course it is complex and there's no human on earth who can explan why everyone is poor. A good reason to be poor is that u have a mental illness that prevent u from work it is out of your control, no good reason and I ve met such ppl is getting pregnant at 18 and then again at 20, w o a stable relationship or job and then begging ppl for money for ur children

    • @gGBb27
      @gGBb27 3 года назад +12

      @Kea Lucky he is a genius and u are an idiot compared to him... but don't worry we all kind of are; the thing about poor ppl and rich ppl is that iq and subsequently the value of ur work goes up with income

    • @rafangille
      @rafangille 3 года назад

      @000 i agree 100%, it’s so sad seeing how disillusioned americans are with government. a better future is possible but too many people are ignorant

  • @AE-nf8nz
    @AE-nf8nz 3 года назад +60

    Yeah... this is what happens when your country becomes tourism focused and theres no middle class its just working class retail and restaurant and then super rich families

    • @TheEd1225
      @TheEd1225 3 года назад +1

      Sounds very very familiar 🤔

    • @oooba3628
      @oooba3628 3 года назад +2

      This is what’s happening to LA

    • @Amatersuful
      @Amatersuful 3 года назад +2

      @@oooba3628 kinda explains nyc too

  • @aks304
    @aks304 3 года назад +17

    I’m a uni student in venice and renting prices most of the time are ridiculously high, especially from a student’s perspective. And a lot of the times the houses are pretty old and need a lot of repairs... and while it’s nice to finally not have thousands of tourists swarming around and always being in the way, it’s kind of surreal to see

    • @MrHarizHasnan
      @MrHarizHasnan 3 года назад

      Ca' Foscari?

    • @vioricagrosei324
      @vioricagrosei324 3 года назад +1

      Dude,have you seen Paris prices ? Venice is extremely cheap in comparison

  • @SyndicateBastard
    @SyndicateBastard 3 года назад +73

    They protested against tourists like a year ago.

    • @nalzazlan
      @nalzazlan 3 года назад +4

      And?

    • @Oniontrololol
      @Oniontrololol 3 года назад +12

      Oh the irony

    • @hugo9547
      @hugo9547 3 года назад +10

      It’s the same situation in Barcelona , more tourists than residents !

    • @thomasa4239
      @thomasa4239 3 года назад +1

      Hahahahaha

    • @MaryJaneJones.
      @MaryJaneJones. 3 года назад

      I just said that.

  • @Djdavidnyan
    @Djdavidnyan 3 года назад +44

    I lived in Venice for a short period and felt the struggle of the residents. Happy to know there is someone working for the city

  • @goji508
    @goji508 3 года назад +119

    "Damn tourists"
    Now I see why countries hate them driving up prices and the citizens suffer.

    • @margaretwilson8736
      @margaretwilson8736 3 года назад +12

      The problem is that, in some cities, they're the main source of income. It's a love hate relationship. I personally am glad the city I live in isn't a tourist hub. However, some cities have always relied on travelers.

    • @pensatoreseneca
      @pensatoreseneca 3 года назад +4

      But we all benefit from them .. so let’s not be hypocrites

    • @swicheroo1
      @swicheroo1 3 года назад +3

      @@margaretwilson8736 My city is a major tourist draw for the rest of the world. But it also has other industries--shipping, aerospace, movie, manufacture--that make the downturn less destructive on the over-all economy. It's just a bad idea to depend upon monocultures of any sort. Venezuela sunk when oil sunk.

    • @vanthaitran3493
      @vanthaitran3493 3 года назад +2

      The keywords are "income diversity" my friend. And the problem is on how the government handle tourism not blaming on tourists. In my city, tourist places have overpriced shops as you mention. But the citizen has lots of Local shops as well. Venice got it wrong from the start. But only now, when tourism around the world stop, it does appear.

  • @adhiantos
    @adhiantos 3 года назад +25

    I think the lady’s description of Venice in the end is pretty powerful. It’s always sad to see a city turn into something else while the residents pay the price. Just curious, how can we find balance between these two issues? Would banning people from converting their houses into Airbnb help? And should he government convert those abandoned houses into social housing or sort?

    • @jiaxuanng2396
      @jiaxuanng2396 2 года назад +1

      The biggest issue is that the city relies on tourism to make money, in turn increasing house pricing. It just goes round and round.

  • @leoncampa
    @leoncampa 3 года назад +176

    I visited Venice 3 times over the last 15 years... and every time it was more touristy and crowded (with tourists) than the last.
    The last time I went in 2018, I felt nothing was authentic anymore. I realized I was also part of the problem, and have committed to never going back unless tourist quotas are imposed and the Italian government takes the city's issues seriously.
    Alas, I can say the same for Florence or Rome. Italians need to start forming other industries than just pure tourism for income.

    • @lucaesposito6896
      @lucaesposito6896 3 года назад +32

      Well, Italy is already the second manufacturing country in Europe after Germany, what are you talking about?

    • @siloemascolo2769
      @siloemascolo2769 3 года назад +14

      @@lucaesposito6896 its also very productive on agriculture specially on the plains. It could be a VERY rich country if the capital moved away from Rome.

    • @Xryujfdjd
      @Xryujfdjd 3 года назад +7

      They do..there is a very famous Italian mafia..

    • @curiousworld7912
      @curiousworld7912 3 года назад +8

      I'm glad I saw these cities back in the '70s. Venice itself was quiet, beautiful, and affordable for teenagers backpacking through Europe. Of course there were tourists, but nothing like pre-COVID19. Over the years, I've seen countless news stories on the overwhelming masses of tourists, and the loss of locals. Sadly, if this doesn't change, Venice will end up as nothing more than a theme park. This story is so heartbreaking - people that have lost their means of income and thus their homes; yet at the same time there being so many abandoned homes that could be rehabbed and lived in.

    • @blitcut9712
      @blitcut9712 3 года назад +8

      Tourism makes up 13% of Italian GDP. While it's important it's far from the only source of income in Italy.

  • @bojansmeh2056
    @bojansmeh2056 3 года назад +21

    Airbnb is a problem in every place not just venice

    • @user-fv1cd5nx3w
      @user-fv1cd5nx3w 3 года назад +3

      AirBnB is a savior like uber. It has terminated outrageous pricing and leveled the playing field for anyone that wants to get a fair price for a house. If you can't compete - you rightfully sink

    • @user-wb1vm9ex4k
      @user-wb1vm9ex4k 3 года назад

      @@user-fv1cd5nx3w Agreed

    • @bogo_wanderlust3692
      @bogo_wanderlust3692 3 года назад

      If hotels decided to put lower prices then i would go there but they normally have expenses so i prefer going to AIRBNB

    • @katepausig8562
      @katepausig8562 3 года назад

      @@user-fv1cd5nx3w Dumb dumb

  • @joeywho534
    @joeywho534 3 года назад +80

    It wasn’t Covid it’s the way the world handled it.

    • @jjpp2216
      @jjpp2216 2 года назад

      You’re quite right. COVID just accelerated something about which Venetians have been complaining for 20 or more years. They want a livable, practical city. I first went in the 1980s. The city was so different then. Schools, children playing, churches that people attended not just to see the gift shop but to do church-y stuff, arts, dance, theatre, opera, music, all dying now. Because tourists don’t send their kids to little league sports so let’s stop little league sports. And a community dies.

  • @genekwagmyrsingh9433
    @genekwagmyrsingh9433 3 года назад +150

    Unless we decide people deserve a safe place to live, we're doomed.

    • @sor3999
      @sor3999 3 года назад

      Doomed for the people who had the ladder pulled up on them

    • @supercooled
      @supercooled 3 года назад

      No we’re not. Those who know how and more importantly willing, to exploit the weak and disenfranchised will always thrive while the little guy suffers and will continue to suffer. It has always been that way. Look at the forgotten in Africa continue to suffer while the rest of the world throw them a bone once in a while and pat rhemselves on the back for being charitable and out of sight out of mind.

    • @notmyrealname7863
      @notmyrealname7863 3 года назад

      She decided she deserved to live in some one's home and not pay them for it. So looks like that's happening.

    • @YouYou-sm8tf
      @YouYou-sm8tf 3 года назад

      @@supercooled AFRICA’s biggest problem is overpopulation and no investments in education to build industrries’on its own.

    • @supercooled
      @supercooled 3 года назад

      @@YouYou-sm8tf how can they invest in their future when their present situation is so tenuous they don’t know if they’ll see next week or next month? It’s a luxury a lot of nations like tours and mine take for granted. It’s like a rich person with wealth accumulation say they don’t know how someone can live check to check. Not all situations are black and white mind you but there are mitigating measures and sadly a lot of people do not take the steps to do it.

  • @Native-Kitty
    @Native-Kitty 3 года назад +8

    This is why I like to watch Vice. They put out news that other media outlets are not doing. As an American, I have never heard about this until watching this video. It absolutely sucks what is happening in Venice! I’m definitely thinking twice about visiting if this is how residents are being treated. For me visiting a place is ALL about the locals, the everyday people who live their lives there. The everyday people are what make a place beautiful!

  • @xxxxMonkeyGirlxxxx
    @xxxxMonkeyGirlxxxx 3 года назад +115

    My boyfriend visited Venice about 4-5 years ago and said it was nothing but a tourist trap and everything was ridiculously overpriced.

    • @caterinamontolli8909
      @caterinamontolli8909 3 года назад +22

      E il to ragazzo non ga capio un casso!

    • @TakemishiTakahashi
      @TakemishiTakahashi 3 года назад

      @@caterinamontolli8909 iu ga rason!

    • @TakemishiTakahashi
      @TakemishiTakahashi 3 года назад +5

      @@caterinamontolli8909 Ovviamente, non TUTTO è una trappola per turisti, ma è un fenomeno espanso ben oltre il classsico "Strada Nova-Ponte di Rialto-San Marco-Biennale"

    • @germanogirardelli
      @germanogirardelli 3 года назад +8

      There's more to venice than those 2-3 monuments. Ya gotta put the effort and go looking for stuff.

    • @cyclox73
      @cyclox73 3 года назад +16

      Germano, I completely agree. The most wonderful parts of Venice are away from the crowds. You literally only have to go 1-2 blocks over and it’s a different world. I think that tourism in Venice can be sustainable if they eliminated big one day cruise ships from coming in. It would be a less Disneylandish experience without those massive crowds coming in by the hordes. I think there can be a balance between tourism and maintaining the rich past and culture of Venice.

  • @cvrajendra
    @cvrajendra 3 года назад +40

    I am currently squatting in a property which was abandoned in 2016....just costed €2100 and €300 yearly taxes and now its mine bcoz I paid the tax for 4 years continuously

    • @ItchyKneeSon
      @ItchyKneeSon 3 года назад +10

      I know of a similar story regarding a mountain in Japan. The previous owner was years behind on their taxes and the village it's located in was looking for someone to purchase it. A doctor came to the rescue; they paid the taxes and maintained the hiking trail that runs along its peak for 10+ years. It's since been sold to someone else, but the village is grateful for the doctor's kind contribution.

    • @dvidsuarez
      @dvidsuarez 3 года назад

      Where's that? Really interesting, please tell us more. Congrats.

    • @LC76182
      @LC76182 3 года назад

      Tell us more, I'm looking into buying.

    • @saniyavenkatesh1613
      @saniyavenkatesh1613 11 месяцев назад

      Hi sir! I am a prospective student in ca foscari university of Venice. I have also gotten accepted but I need some assistance with other processes. Can you please reply so that I can get some clarity sir? Please 🙏🏼

  • @quantumthinker3248
    @quantumthinker3248 3 года назад +25

    "You will own nothing, and you will be happy"

  • @shoulderlabrum520
    @shoulderlabrum520 3 года назад +29

    this could be said for Venice Los Angeles CA

  • @angelinanar7522
    @angelinanar7522 3 года назад +64

    Sounds like Lisbon and NYC.

  • @horatiohuskisson5471
    @horatiohuskisson5471 3 года назад +37

    This happens to many touristy small cities such as Barcelona and Amsterdam. They should ban the huge cruise ships coming in as generally they don’t even spend much money and just crowd the streets. Also they should encourage longer trips rather than weekend visits so people visit a wider range of monuments rather and everyone crowding out St. Marks Square.

    • @caroselloshow5615
      @caroselloshow5615 3 года назад +5

      Barcelona and amsterdam are really not small at all lol venice is isolated with no buffer zone and just 50 thousands inhabitants that’s why it’s such a massive issue there but the other two cities are big global cities with a way more diversified economy and actually millions of inhabitants in their metro areas. They are overcrowded too with tourists but it’s way different

    • @ilviandante2040
      @ilviandante2040 3 года назад

      Amsterdam Barcellona small cities lol

  • @Channel-ou9rq
    @Channel-ou9rq 3 года назад +21

    Where is the Mayor of Venice that only the Deputy Mayor was available to be interviewed? Why is Rome preventing the Venetians in resolving this problem? If the Deputy Mayor is pointing at Rome, I think they should follow up with Rome. Additionally, Covid did not "exposed" the Venice's housing Crisis; DW Documentary covered this problem back in 2018.

    • @minkyone
      @minkyone 3 года назад +5

      The mayor has been busy managing hands-on the "Mose" issues recently (the machine which stops the high tide).
      Mose is owned by the central governament and they have ultimate authority. The mayor is working to get the legal power to lift the barrier without having to wait for Rome's consent (which is often too slow to respond and prevent the high tide)

  • @capucnechaussonpassion14
    @capucnechaussonpassion14 3 года назад +14

    I've been to Venise and it already suite looks like a disneylandish theme park of what people from the USA can imagine Europe to look like. It's beyond pretty but it's hard to find life there and it feels like you're just walking in a decor

  • @Zexel14
    @Zexel14 3 года назад +80

    The reason I never visited Disneyland is the same why I never want to visit Venice again. It's all fake.
    The mass tourism is one thing. Another is the gap between the steep prices and the poor quality. The money is simply not reinvested.

    • @morrismorris9691
      @morrismorris9691 3 года назад +13

      It depends on how you live it. Venice is not Disneyland: it's a true city with people living there. The only problem is the mass tourism. So come, but when you do it, make sure to visit less "popular" but more characteristic places, like Campo Santa Margherita, Campo San Polo, Burano, la Giudecca. You will get a better and more unique experience.

    • @ferro9947
      @ferro9947 3 года назад +2

      History is a joke for you 😂?

    • @ferro9947
      @ferro9947 3 года назад

      History is a joke for you 😂?

    • @RariettyC
      @RariettyC 3 года назад +1

      At least Disney parks (and other similar tourist traps) "steal" a person's limited vacation time away so that they don't treat residential areas like theme parks. Theme parks and all-inclusive resorts generally help keep tourists from mistreating the residents of the place they're visiting. Issue is, when a whole city is enough of a draw by itself, it'll probably be more profitable for politicians, homeowners, and business owners to treat their city like a theme park rather than having to directly face the problems of locals.

    • @Kukamad
      @Kukamad 3 года назад +3

      Are we really comparing the great Venice to Disneyland?

  • @pokemonmaster2151
    @pokemonmaster2151 3 года назад +10

    The same can be said in some places in the world. I live around New Orleans and tourism is something that surrounds everything. My dad lost his job because he used to work in the hotel industry and we're not the only ones.

  • @cptorange1687
    @cptorange1687 3 года назад +5

    As someone from a place that also relies on tourism (Lisbon) this rings a bell, and makes me sad.
    I spent 2 days in venice in Nov 2017 and stayed in a seminary. Waking up at 5am to catch the train and seeing the sunrise as I walked across venice, it was one of the most beautiful things i've ever seen.
    There wasn't that many tourists, only thing I regret missing is the basilica, it closed when i was waiting in line. I hope to go back there one day.

    • @davidetoffoletto9981
      @davidetoffoletto9981 3 года назад

      I spent my uni exchange period out in Lisbon and I loved your city and your country. I'm from Venice and the only city in the world I consider as beautiful as Venice is Lisbon. Até à próxima Lisboa 👋👋

  • @e.l.l.e.tierrablankaa
    @e.l.l.e.tierrablankaa 3 года назад +14

    I don’t speak Italian but when she said “ la fregatura” my Spanish kicked in and I felt that 😔 “ los gobiernos no mas quieren fregar y joder”

  • @Hartz93
    @Hartz93 3 года назад +98

    I was traveling through Italy by car and decided to visit Venice. I stayed only for three hours because of what is being repeated in this video; the place feels like an amusement park.

    • @ShahidulIslam-yu6ck
      @ShahidulIslam-yu6ck 3 года назад +10

      You can’t go anywhere by car in Venice...

    • @xxxxMonkeyGirlxxxx
      @xxxxMonkeyGirlxxxx 3 года назад +5

      @George Floyd Gaming visit another city. Venice is overpriced for what it offers. Wien, Prague, Hamburg, etc.. are all better options.

    • @claudioc7861
      @claudioc7861 3 года назад +20

      People who visit for three hours like you did are the root of the problem smh

    • @claudioc7861
      @claudioc7861 3 года назад +19

      @@xxxxMonkeyGirlxxxx If art and architecture are of interest to you Venice offers hundreds of times more than any of the cities you mentioned

    • @ashtonkarr7154
      @ashtonkarr7154 3 года назад +3

      @George Floyd Gaming nope. Been there twice, never go in summer. It’s very hot, you’ve to take crowded boat rides to get where you want to go and if it rains a lot the city floods lol

  • @Hashishin8
    @Hashishin8 3 года назад +16

    I'm a real Venice unhabitant.
    Still haven't seen the entire video, but I deeply understand the problem here, it all begin with the idea of Venice as a beautiful and untouchable city which lead to politics that fransformed the lagoon in a sort of museum.
    No more big investments in residential or productive plans, no attention to the citizienship.
    In 50 years (since 1970s) the interests of cruise companies, tourism-related activities, big international brands became more and more important to politics than the unhabitants.
    Venice could still be a model for the 3rd millenium economy, focusing on museums and historical tourism-related programs, and in some way it is, but there are two more critic problems: living here is expensive (buying a house is almost impossible, and the rents are way too high beacuse of the greed of landlords and market prices) and there is no real specialized work for youngsters. You can be a waiter, a hotel-related worker or a courier/transportation employee, not really more.
    Venice has some hope, that comes from the students of the many universities seats and culture-related activities, and from the people that loves her.
    I hope I could clear some of the main issues of this ancient, special and stunning city.
    I suggest to visit her in company of some locals to enjoy the real traditions and see some really unique places!
    Hello everyone from Murano, northern lagoon's glass district 🌿🙏🏼

    • @gianmarcorusso1713
      @gianmarcorusso1713 3 года назад +1

      Adoro che becco i tuoi commenti sotto tutti i video di Venezia :D E concordo sempre, inutile dirlo.

    • @cesarhernandez7064
      @cesarhernandez7064 3 года назад

      I ♥️ Venice seeing too many tourist is killing it not for the tourist, but the locals who are living there. That's why I bought a mask came from Venice found it some random shop in LA. I adore Venice Carnival Masks are handmade not manufactures. Yeah the government of Venice don't care their inhabitants only profits, money and greed. Screw Airbnb there nothing greedy pigs who keep eating and eating non stop.

  • @dillongreaney4265
    @dillongreaney4265 3 года назад +22

    "The housing crisis here is unique in that it affects the middle class"... Yeah, not unique unfortunately.

  • @sanujitroy6830
    @sanujitroy6830 3 года назад +6

    In many countries rent declining, people not able to repay loan, real estate under pressure

  • @jennlee21
    @jennlee21 3 года назад +113

    Even the poor squatters in Italy look like models

    • @elibuledi5152
      @elibuledi5152 3 года назад +3

      ...why are you so mean ???

    • @YouMockMe
      @YouMockMe 3 года назад +7

      And still can't hold down a man LOL

    • @elibuledi5152
      @elibuledi5152 3 года назад +16

      @@YouMockMe Maybe Age doesn't want a man or is divorced .You hate women...

    • @FrenchSaladMac
      @FrenchSaladMac 3 года назад +8

      @@YouMockMe I noticed that, she's thin and beautiful but still can't keep a man at 36 lol

    • @YouMockMe
      @YouMockMe 3 года назад +2

      @@FrenchSaladMac No one said she makes them wait hahahaha

  • @jpsimas2
    @jpsimas2 3 года назад +32

    Those closed houses' purpose is to artificially rise house and rent prices. It's not the government doing this, but the real estate market

    • @sociolocomtsac
      @sociolocomtsac 3 года назад +5

      Low interest rates don't help. It's also gov't policies that make tourism-centered housing easier to get permits for. Hotels bring in more tax $$$.

    • @ekklesiast
      @ekklesiast 3 года назад

      Lol, they simply don't have the money to maintain those houses. This is his how socialism always works, everything goes to ruins.

  • @supermexican12
    @supermexican12 3 года назад +26

    shame on the officials in charge of this city. But this must be fixed from the ground up - the people must vote these crooked people out and vote those who care about the residents in.

    • @leiselr5135
      @leiselr5135 3 года назад +2

      Many times people have to choose between who is the least crooked. Often time lobyists and special interests ( those with money ) who control what government officials can and will do.

  • @jschmidt1460
    @jschmidt1460 3 года назад +11

    If there was a housing crisis, why are fancy buildings being built around the world to be vacant?

    • @scfog90
      @scfog90 3 года назад

      This is the sole meaning of a housing crisis. Empty luxury Appartements means a lot of speculation and overpriced living space that will loose it's value in a Bang

  • @31joito
    @31joito 3 года назад +9

    Rent was 1,700.00 bucks at month? That’s crazy

    • @LiamPorterFilms
      @LiamPorterFilms 3 года назад +1

      I wasn’t sure I heard that right - it’s absurd

    • @serenissimarespublicavenet3945
      @serenissimarespublicavenet3945 3 года назад +2

      Sadly, it's a normal price here. For many homes you have to pay a rent of over 2000 euros (about 2300 dollars) per months even!

    • @lvi8957
      @lvi8957 3 года назад

      Try Amsterdam😜

  • @Ronnie508
    @Ronnie508 3 года назад +3

    It’s sad a lot of people died from Covid 19 but on the other hand with places having people stay home it gives this earth a little chance to heal in a way.

  • @28ebdh3udnav
    @28ebdh3udnav 3 года назад +36

    We need to restart ths Tourism industry with restrictions. Something is better than nothing

  • @AJ-sw8uf
    @AJ-sw8uf 3 года назад +24

    I couldn’t imagine being from Venice

    • @marcoborghi9327
      @marcoborghi9327 3 года назад +5

      You would love drinking

    • @leich33
      @leich33 3 года назад

      You would love drinking

  • @faceoddity373
    @faceoddity373 3 года назад +2

    I am 19 and living near Venice. This year in September I decided to study history at Ca Foscari university. I found an apartment that I divided with two other girls. The rent was of €300 a month, it was old and with no hot water. At some point me and my roommate thought we had covid, so we informed the owner. He said that he wanted us out of the flat asap. Later he apologized but we were treated so badly that we decided to leave the apartment and keep doing online classes. We didn't get our bail money back, although we left the flat in "perfect condition" (it was already horrific). I had a terrible experience and so did my roommate. She's still studying, while I dropped out. I hope I'll start again next year, but not in Venice.

    • @jpaola9659
      @jpaola9659 3 года назад

      That is horrible 😔 hoping the best for you wherever you are. Don't ever stop fighting for your goals and I hope you get to finish your studies ❤️ Courage.

    • @faceoddity373
      @faceoddity373 3 года назад

      @@jpaola9659 Thank you so much❤

    • @saniyavenkatesh1613
      @saniyavenkatesh1613 Год назад

      Hi I've applied for ca foscari, is it a good university? Is it worth it as a foreigner? What are the chances that i won't get accepted? I apologise for the number of question, I just have so many questions and no answers.

  • @pelviselvis3421
    @pelviselvis3421 3 года назад +14

    Amazing video. I love Venice and hope it can be saved.

  • @hxctalent
    @hxctalent 3 года назад +60

    Reminds me a lot of Hawaii.... :(

    • @monsieurdorgat6864
      @monsieurdorgat6864 3 года назад +1

      Too bad Hawaii is in America. If you thought Venice catered hard to tourists with money and corporations... well...

    • @dead_beatbunny
      @dead_beatbunny 3 года назад +1

      Was coming here to say the same thing. I lived there for a few years and this was what bothered me the most. Every penny on the island went back into tourism and waikiki while the locals were living in poverty and suffering. They would frequently shuffle the homeless out of the main drag to prevent tourists from seeing the reality of how people live there. While I was there there was even a local politician who would go around and trash homeless camps, smash their belongings and harrass them. No one blinked an eye.

    • @hxctalent
      @hxctalent 3 года назад +2

      @@dead_beatbunny Oh Tom Brower, then he got beat up by houseless, thinking he was immune to consequence along Ala Wai? LOL I'm Hawaiian, live between Nanakuli and Las Vegas. Both are day and night in essence of affordable living; alongside catering to tourism... EXCEPT LV has contingency industries (gaming/solar energy/gambling/marijuana [in which every taxed penny goes to public schools]). The islands lack the willingness to change, the willingness to help while at the same time using just purely "Being Hawaii" (hope that makes sense) as the reason to not change.
      Hell, an 11 year old child introduced a bill pre covid to have epilepsy/seizure first aid training in schools to at least one person on staff (which is turn the patient on their left side, time the seizure, and wait for the patient to come back to consciousness, call an ambulance if the seizure lasts longer than 2-4 mins). Unanimously turned down. HOW?!

    • @dead_beatbunny
      @dead_beatbunny 3 года назад +1

      @@hxctalent I didn't hear they had beat him up. Serves him right.

    • @hxctalent
      @hxctalent 3 года назад

      @@dead_beatbunny He did it for weeks at unattended camps, then he tried it at attended camps. It didn't go well lol

  • @NeenasThaiKitchen
    @NeenasThaiKitchen 2 года назад +2

    I’ve visited Venice a few times and had wonderful time there. I’m sad to see the current condition and wish them all the best in coming back after COVID. Thanks for sharing their situation and making people more aware about their struggles. 🙏

  • @MichaelLee-nn9fo
    @MichaelLee-nn9fo 3 года назад +158

    “The World is in a crisis cause by humans” anonymous

    • @steffondoyle8071
      @steffondoyle8071 3 года назад +1

      Gee you think?

    • @Bettie_Rage
      @Bettie_Rage 3 года назад +7

      ​@@Kigoz4Life
      He can't even spell his annoying spam correctly.

    • @Bettie_Rage
      @Bettie_Rage 3 года назад +3

      The sky is blue. You are even less smart by spamming than it's pointless "quote" itself.

    • @ekklesiast
      @ekklesiast 3 года назад

      By governments*

    • @Numidium_
      @Numidium_ 3 года назад

      @@Bettie_Rage well, blame Satan then like always.

  • @donaldotrumpriguez9572
    @donaldotrumpriguez9572 3 года назад +24

    In california the smell of homeless camps as you enter exit and drive down the freeway has exposed the housing crisis for years

    • @VisceralHamster
      @VisceralHamster 3 года назад

      We don’t talk about that here.

    • @lblanc8107
      @lblanc8107 3 года назад +4

      They allocated 1.2 billion $ to solve the problem and an auditor found out that 60% of it went to feed bureaucracy, consultants and politics that wouldn’t make money if the problem didn’t exist.
      With the rest of that they built military tents that no homeless wants to go to because they can’t do drugs there.

    • @Rommie26
      @Rommie26 3 года назад +1

      Thank the democrats for not enforcing illegal immigration
      Supply and demand

    • @severedyakhead9702
      @severedyakhead9702 3 года назад

      Commiefornia for you. Know democrats will destroy the country.

    • @andrewnorris7642
      @andrewnorris7642 3 года назад

      @@lblanc8107 Got a link?

  • @naceks
    @naceks 3 года назад +14

    she is my generation - we are lost generation, we were hit with financial crisis first, then we just got something under our feet and now this c*ap...a lot of us will lose everything we did for the second time...
    this is perfect ground for sth really bad to happen, I hope it won't...

    • @Robert89349
      @Robert89349 3 года назад +2

      You can't imagine how much I feel what you're saying. Greek, in my early thirties, work in tourism.

    • @naceks
      @naceks 3 года назад +1

      @@Robert89349 i got chills on my back when I read your comment...
      I can only say that I feel your pain and heads up, we will get through this somehow...

    • @Robert89349
      @Robert89349 3 года назад

      @@naceks It is just that I never wanted to leave the country like thousands of young people, I wanted to stay, because someone has to stay. I've chosen to work in hospitality in order to welcome guests to Greece, I never felt like being a host for visitors in Berlin or Copenhagen... But I feel like I'm constantly punished for staying. It's been ten years.
      Stay strong, we will make it. We always do.

  • @Junkyard444
    @Junkyard444 3 года назад

    I remeber travelling here 3 years ago the ammount of abandoned houses then was crazy and noticeable even at such a young age

  • @poet82n
    @poet82n 3 года назад +2

    I was in Venice for a week in 2013. It was beautiful and I was around some of the same places they showed in the video. Sad to see what's happening there.

  • @skoolfruit1658
    @skoolfruit1658 3 года назад +17

    0:25 through 0:27 the liquid in that cup literally rises off of whatever powder she put in there

    • @a.d.7042
      @a.d.7042 3 года назад +5

      that powder is instant coffee like nescafe

    • @skoolfruit1658
      @skoolfruit1658 3 года назад +2

      @@a.d.7042 oh okay make senses

    • @lilmandanga
      @lilmandanga 3 года назад +1

      fake news, thats one of them deep fakes brother

  • @kristinangelicatubig6680
    @kristinangelicatubig6680 3 года назад +5

    question is, what is venice without tourism? a beautiful yet empty city. just like many themeparks, once the spark has gone, they are abandoned.

    • @AE-nf8nz
      @AE-nf8nz 3 года назад

      bc they overfocuded on tourism and let their other industries die

  • @leigh7507
    @leigh7507 3 года назад +1

    Venice is larger than you think. Away from San Marco it's not so touristy.

  • @SKtube0
    @SKtube0 3 года назад +2

    Sad. I've been to Venice twice...once back in '04 and again in '18 and IMO, it's completely changed. Everything from the structures, weather, the people, even the vibe in the air...it was borderline depressing on my last visit compared to '04. Back then, the place seemed to be full of life and it was the Venice I had imagined and heard about. Not the case these days and it's a shame for such a place with it's history.

  • @seanmeantime
    @seanmeantime 3 года назад +5

    Airbnb has ruined the rental market. They should be illegal it’s destroyed so much

    • @faizanrana2998
      @faizanrana2998 3 года назад +2

      Airbnb has been a revelation. I want it everywhere, just not in my town (London). Always holiday in one

    • @user-fv1cd5nx3w
      @user-fv1cd5nx3w 3 года назад

      Airbnb allows for a fair and open market. If you can't compete in an open market, then you will sink. Change your skill set to fit the needs of an open market.

    • @user-wb1vm9ex4k
      @user-wb1vm9ex4k 3 года назад +1

      Airbnb has put a stop to us getting ripped off

    • @faizanrana2998
      @faizanrana2998 3 года назад

      @@user-wb1vm9ex4k exactly by bastard hotels

    • @faizanrana2998
      @faizanrana2998 3 года назад

      @@user-wb1vm9ex4k plus I've hired spectacular apartments with jacuzzis and sauna on a sea facing balcony off airbnb. Tell me which hotels offer this?

  • @Satikal
    @Satikal 3 года назад +28

    Sheesh that coffee looks real good rn

  • @BeorEviols
    @BeorEviols 3 года назад +9

    We've got a housing crisis all over Europe, they're gentrifying everywhere. Building only office buildings and luxury apartments

    • @GabrielAyalaGAARTE
      @GabrielAyalaGAARTE 3 года назад

      that's been in new york as well

    • @raincloudsradio8900
      @raincloudsradio8900 3 года назад +1

      Not really true. Countryside Europe has very cheap prices for housing

    • @AsiaMinor12
      @AsiaMinor12 3 года назад

      Housing crisis while most European countries are declining demographically, what a joke.

    • @thomasgrabkowski8283
      @thomasgrabkowski8283 3 года назад +1

      @@AsiaMinor12 Housing crisis is only accelerating demographic decline, as young people cannot afford homes or have homes so small that there is no extra room for family and thus don't have children. In fact, its been pinned down as one of the main reasons for the demographic decline of Europe, North America and East Asia

    • @ekklesiast
      @ekklesiast 3 года назад

      Government's zoning regulations make building affordable housing prohibitive.

  • @uttcftptid4481
    @uttcftptid4481 3 года назад +2

    Sounds familiar, over here in the US. 500,000 veterans sleeping on the streets every night while 500,000 rich people's vacation homes sit unused 363 days per year.

  • @thomasmoll8822
    @thomasmoll8822 3 года назад +3

    I have visited three times: ca 1990, 2007 and 2019. IIRC, the hotspots have always been packed, but it was and still is possible to go into random “uncharted” neighborhoods and be pretty much on your own.
    Two things have changed though: the AirBnB BS (which this video isn’t blaming enough) and the absolutely breathtaking amount of Chinese tourists in large groups.

    • @davidetoffoletto9981
      @davidetoffoletto9981 3 года назад +1

      Exactly, If you go out of the two-three main spots you can't find a single soul. My city looks abandones and frozen in timelost years

  • @robertsmith7637
    @robertsmith7637 3 года назад +26

    Give a man a gun he can rob a bank
    Give a man a bank he can rob the world🤔🤔🤔

  • @anna_m59
    @anna_m59 3 года назад +1

    The problem that majority of people in Venice are living from tourism. If no tourists, no job and no money to survive for the locals. The government should balance both locals and tourism. The taxes should be turn for invest in renovation.

  • @MalaysiaBarista
    @MalaysiaBarista 2 года назад +1

    The title is wrong. It should be: "High unemployment in Venice due to COVID". Basically everyone in this video is saying how they don't have a job, since Venice relies 100% on tourist and there is no tourist during COVID. This is not caused by no house/home , or the lack of them.

  • @DanielleCapichano
    @DanielleCapichano 3 года назад +26

    He's right and absolutely on the money. Goodluck and Godspeed to him and everyone doing what he's up to.

  • @nootherchance7819
    @nootherchance7819 3 года назад +11

    Somebody somewhere is benefiting from all of this.

    • @123machet
      @123machet 3 года назад

      CCP benefits

    • @ekklesiast
      @ekklesiast 3 года назад

      Government gets more power and money. The mayor said he'll be spending 23mln of taxpayer's money.

  • @gianreyes7176
    @gianreyes7176 3 года назад +1

    Its not only them...pray for peace

  • @MG-xq1bx
    @MG-xq1bx 3 года назад

    My husband, my nine year old and I traveled from Croatia 🇭🇷 to Venice back in June 2019, it was a beautiful experience.. but very crowded and overpriced.

  • @tegimen
    @tegimen 3 года назад +12

    Venice was an incredibly wealthy and powerful city 500-600 years ago. This is basically the fate of all powerful empires, where at the end they become an amusement park of their former selves.

    • @hayaglamazonluxe
      @hayaglamazonluxe 3 года назад +5

      Sometimes I wonder what Venice looked like during its heyday. Must have been decadent & gorgeous.

    • @00doblecero
      @00doblecero 3 года назад

      @@hayaglamazonluxe It was the richest city in the world one day. Something like Dubai in today's era

  • @helenamirian908
    @helenamirian908 3 года назад +5

    I have refused to use Air bnb because of what it does to housing markets.

    • @user-fv1cd5nx3w
      @user-fv1cd5nx3w 3 года назад

      Then you are making a fool of yourself, by overpaying for housing. Airbnb creates an open market, which determined the fair pricing of housing.

    • @hebjdhdhdbbshshshshs9119
      @hebjdhdhdbbshshshshs9119 3 года назад +2

      @@user-fv1cd5nx3w how dense are you????? Yes it creates an open market for TOURISTS. But is super awful for people that want to LIVE and WORK in the city. Rich people buy houses to use for airbnb so there is an housing crisis. How fair is it to let people sleep on the streets because they weren't able to pay for insane prices? People like you have got the wrong mindset and will continue to abuse certain things till it's destroyed for ever.

    • @user-fv1cd5nx3w
      @user-fv1cd5nx3w 3 года назад +1

      @@hebjdhdhdbbshshshshs9119 In Venice, local people without tourists would starve to death, and for them to be complaining about tourists being offered cheaper and better housing, is like sitting on a tree branch, and simultaneously sawing off the branch. If they can not make a living wage being a waiter that serves tourists, oh well - maybe go to the FREE universities in Europe and increase your qualification and get a real job. Sounds like losers complaining about their situation, while being too lazy to step into the social mobility elevator.

    • @hebjdhdhdbbshshshshs9119
      @hebjdhdhdbbshshshshs9119 3 года назад

      @@user-fv1cd5nx3w mate I'm strictly talking about AIRBNB and people buying the houses. Yes tourism must suck but like you said, they survive mostly off it. We are talking about there not being enough houses or it's to expensive not about too much or too little tourism

    • @user-wb1vm9ex4k
      @user-wb1vm9ex4k 3 года назад

      @@hebjdhdhdbbshshshshs9119 so you’re saying air bnb single-handedly caused this? I doubt it

  • @jjpp2216
    @jjpp2216 2 года назад +1

    “This city should be rethought for its residents.” More true words have never been spoken. I am a frequent visitor. Although I’d like to think I am “better” than the problematic tourist-I tend to stay for weeks or even a month at a time, visiting grocery stores, getting to know the local people and build relationships, but perhaps I delude myself), perhaps I am part of the problem. I have witnessed the decline of Venice over the past 20 years. Schools, medical services, gyms, all in decline (you can run on a treadmill in one of the larger hotels but try finding a local boxing gym-ha!). And don’t try raising kids there-while the city is ideal for families (small, no crime, no traffic), the fact is that schools, athletic teams, social clubs are all in great decline.
    It’s all so sad. The city has dedicated itself to overnight tourists (land, buy your t-shirt, get the f out people who do not participate in the building of community). Instead, the city should be a model for the city of tomorrow-pedestrian friendly, safe, community-based, high density, no vehicles. It could be the envy of the world but instead has become a theme park for money.

  • @LauraX-xj6xj
    @LauraX-xj6xj 2 года назад

    There has been a massive issue in Venice in regards to housing for years

  • @protokolarac
    @protokolarac 3 года назад +3

    That's nothing. Come and do same theme research in Ireland. And I promise you that you will be stunnned!

    • @mimovil8730
      @mimovil8730 3 года назад

      What do you mean exactly? Your comment got me curious.

  • @morrismorris9691
    @morrismorris9691 3 года назад +14

    Please dear Americans, when you come to Venice, don't use Airbnb.

    • @andrewb7622
      @andrewb7622 3 года назад

      Good to know, thank you. We'll use other accommodations

    • @hayaglamazonluxe
      @hayaglamazonluxe 3 года назад +3

      @@joesphrobinette8878 The video alludes to it. Essentially, wealthy Italians are buying Venetian flats and houses, putting them on Airbnb and therefore raises the cost of rents to Venetians who are born & bred in the city. They are being squeezed out of their home city because of expensive Airbnbs. This has happened in London and Paris.
      Solutions to this would be stay at a locally owned hotel so you help to enrich locals or stay at a general hotel because locals will be employed there. Airbnbs also take property that could be let to locals off the market.

    • @morrismorris9691
      @morrismorris9691 3 года назад

      @@joesphrobinette8878 I'm a student in Venice myself. It's getting harder to rent even just a small flat cuz airbnb is swallowing everything. plz boycott them. you will make Venetians a great favor.

  • @mikeirl661
    @mikeirl661 3 года назад +1

    There's over a thousand abandoned buildings in Denver Colorado alone that are locked up because no one can pay the lease but yet homelessness skyrockets. this is not an isolated incident in Venice or anywhere in the world this is a worldwide crisis.

  • @SH-ly1uy
    @SH-ly1uy 3 года назад +1

    Corruption and inefficiency in Italy ? I am shocked

  • @samshepperrd
    @samshepperrd 3 года назад +11

    As I see it, landlords have two options. Lower rent prices, or advertise to wealthy Chines or Russians move to Venice.

  • @lrike2250
    @lrike2250 3 года назад +11

    When gentrification is taken to an extreme level

  • @oldcoot7841
    @oldcoot7841 3 года назад +1

    OK the question is "if you were able to cut back on tourism (say 50%) what would you replace the lost revenue with?

    • @vitotigani
      @vitotigani 3 года назад +2

      You replace it with better tourists that stay for longer and actually enjoy spending time in the city. More often than not during pre covid times Venice used to be swarmed by thousands of cheap tourists coming in on huge ships, spending only a few hours and crossing the main activities and top sights off their checklist in a hurry. That’s the worst kind of tourism, all of the cons and few of the pros for a small city like Venice. A cap and an entry fee on the amount of tourists a bit like what Machu Picchu and Cinque Terre are already doing will oblige people to make a choice and only visit Venice if they are truly interested in it, not just to tick off another famous Italian square or bridge on their list.

  • @azeriff
    @azeriff 3 года назад +2

    I lived in Venice several times for a couple of months. I could say the best time to visit is in the second half of Jan. Absolutely perfect medieval atmosphere. In the summer time tourists ruining the image of the city. It becomes like a Disneyland, so sadly.

  • @sophiawoodward7243
    @sophiawoodward7243 3 года назад +4

    I remember calling it a Disneyland when I went to visit. There are very few Venetians in Venice because of tourism its very very sad...

  • @thewyldeone89
    @thewyldeone89 3 года назад +5

    BRUGNARO, prima di Roma, deve impegnarsi in quello che dice venturin

    • @serenissimarespublicavenet3945
      @serenissimarespublicavenet3945 3 года назад +1

      Sono tutti campagnoli di merda i cui interessi sono rivolti a Mestre e non a Venezia. Brugnaro ha detto settembre scorso che ci avrebbe tolto cestini per le immondizie ed operatori ecologici, visto che non lo volevamo. Però quando si tratta di referendum per separare i comuni, allora lui diventa Veneziano doc ed "amante della città". È un bel problema, e non so veramente come fare, visto che i Mestrini lo voteranno sempre e comunque.

  • @arain764niara
    @arain764niara 3 года назад

    I heard that there was a lot of unwanted property for cheap and I'm not just talking about the public housings

  • @sofiagaliazzo7103
    @sofiagaliazzo7103 3 года назад +1

    Living in Venice is extremely expensive! If I was her I would try to look for other apartments on the mainland, Venice is very well connected with transport so it’s easy to move around the whole province, I study there I have friends who lived there but also many of them decided to move to the mainland since the housing situation is so expensive that for a student it’s difficult to pay such rent.
    I wish her luck!

  • @michellesmith8912
    @michellesmith8912 3 года назад +3

    The whole world has fallen into a two class system- rich and poor. We are ignoring it out of fear though. Some of you will know what I mean.

  • @Jodie41202
    @Jodie41202 3 года назад +4

    Venice is overrated.

  • @antidoteify
    @antidoteify 3 года назад +1

    Good for her, she found a way, it looks pretty decent too.

  • @kittyblingbling
    @kittyblingbling 3 года назад +1

    It's sad because Venice is also drowning...

  • @liukwutan
    @liukwutan 3 года назад +4

    As student here in Venice, I can check on this crisis by thinking that each resident I've met is, at least, wealthy.

  • @jibifufu3540
    @jibifufu3540 3 года назад +8

    Why am I reading subtitles when I'm Italian native speaker...

  • @lal6996
    @lal6996 3 года назад +2

    as a tourist you can feel that it Venice is dying because it has become a theme park, a place is brought back to life by the people who permanently live there

  • @Octobermory
    @Octobermory 3 года назад +1

    I hope the mother and her two children will not be evicted from their home. She has done a fine job keeping the place clean and tidy.

  • @jayjasperjp
    @jayjasperjp 3 года назад +3

    I didn’t see a single child in this video

    • @purplerobin92
      @purplerobin92 3 года назад +1

      Children can't go out during lockdown here

  • @TheDoomWizard
    @TheDoomWizard 3 года назад +4

    Damn. Glad I got to see it in person in the early 2010s, my ex-wife & I rented an airbnb. It was like heaven there then. Not anymore.

    • @0mokona0
      @0mokona0 3 года назад +1

      it was like heaven for tourist

  • @larapalma3744
    @larapalma3744 3 года назад

    With built in canal!

  • @Quayleman
    @Quayleman 3 года назад +2

    @vice do something on Pompeii