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Daily Mirror
a day ago
- Daily Mirror
Inside eerie waterpark suddenly abandoned after tragic accident
After a terrible accident took the life of a child at a waterpark, the attraction quickly shut, and it has stood abandoned ever since - but the eerie place looks as though everyone visiting simply vanished An urban explorer has revealed what it was like to visit an abandoned waterpark after a tragic accident saw it shut down completely. It was a Sunday afternoon in April, and two siblings were playing together at a waterpark in Southern Athens. The winds were up, and there had been a lot of rain over the weekend - but some bad weather is never that likely to stop excitable children from making the best of things, especially on a family day out like this one. The two children climbed into a large inflatable ball, that was floating on the surface of the water that filled a large swimming pool. Around them were slides of every shape and size: from the thrill-inducing tallest where guests could see the whole surrounding landscape, with mountains trailing off in the distance, to the smallest, where even the younger children visiting the waterpark could safely play. There were rafts, flying boats, and much more to enjoy at the Copa Copana waterpark, which at 30,000 square metres was one of the very largest attractions of its kind in the area. As the children - the boy, 13, and his younger sister, nine, - played inside the inflatable ball, the winds suddenly increased in speed and strength. With the pair of siblings inside, the inflatable was picked up from the surface of the pool and flung 30 metres (100 feet) away - smashing straight into a metal barrier. The children were rushed to hospital, and the 13-year-old boy, having suffered massive head injuries, was unconscious on arrival. The medical team sprung into action, and attempted to resuscitate him - per the Greek Reporter - but with no success, he was tragically pronounced dead. His younger sister was also critically injured - and was treated in the ICU for a severe lung contusion. Back at the waterpark, the local police detained the two managers who oversaw the facility, and the owner, as they began to investigate whether safety issues at the popular attraction had contributed to the tragic death of the young boy. The Greek police have said that they believe the awful accident occurred because of a combination of "bad weather conditions and human error." The Copa Copana swiftly closed its doors and has never reopened. Urban explorer and photographer Ioanna Sakellarak, 34, ventured into the "creepy" abandoned water park four years later, and claimed that the place had a seriously eerie atmosphere - with all the attractions still in good condition, it was as if by magic all the visitors had simply vanished. "It's a really creepy feeling," she said in 2018, about her visit to the abandoned park, noting that despite some areas of overgrown plants, and the fact some of the pools were drained, it seemed as if people had only just left the attraction. The photographer also said about her trip to capture images of the abandoned waterpark, "I am interested in exploring the fine line between isolation and the connection humans have with places."
Yahoo
08-05-2025
- Yahoo
Incredible tourist destinations that are absolutely SWAMPED by visitors
Swamped by visitors, a slew of cities across Europe are facing the sometimes toxic consequences of unchecked tourism. From Bruges and Barcelona to Budapest and Bath, these idyllic locations are grappling with everything from mass pollution, heavy traffic, bad behaviour and vandalism to severe housing shortages and rising prices that are pushing out long-time residents and eroding local culture. As exasperated natives – and in some cases governments – fight back, read on to discover the European cities that tourists have pushed to breaking point... Venice has long been plagued by overtourism. A UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1987, the iconic floating city has 21 annual tourist arrivals per resident, and the hordes of visitors damage its fragile buildings and clog its narrow streets and canals. Locals have staged anti-tourism protests and the city has introduced a variety of measures, including banning cruise ships from the city centre, imposing a tourist tax, limiting the size of tour groups and outlawing loud speakers. But these tactics are not enough for many residents, who, according to UK newspaper The Guardian, remain especially concerned about the proliferation of short-term holiday lets. Prague saw around 8.1 million visitors last year, a 9% rise on 2023, dwarfing its 1.3 million population. Stag dos are a major problem in the UNESCO-listed city centre, and the city council has banned organised late-night pub crawls and explored banning stag party costumes. Other measures include increased fines for e-scooter violations and tightened noise restrictions. Late-night traffic has been banned from the Old Town, while an ad campaign encouraging tourists to behave themselves was launched in 2023. Like many party-magnet cities, Prague is working to attract culture vultures and discourage lager louts, who can make life hell for locals. Edinburgh receives an estimated 5.3 million overnight stays every year, luring tourists with its UNESCO-listed Old and New Towns, the world's largest arts festival and a whole lot more besides. But all is not rosy in the overcrowded Scottish capital. In 2023, the local council declared a housing emergency, partly driven by an increase in short-term holiday lets. And an article for the UK's i newspaper described the city centre as a "dystopian commercial playground built for tourists and tourists only". In response, the council has tightened regulations on short-term rentals and voted to introduce a tourist tax, despite pushback from the hospitality industry. The population of Athens proper is roughly 650,000, and the city welcomed nearly eight million foreign visitors by air alone in 2024. In an interview with Greek Reporter, expert Katerina Kikilia warned that "the consequences of overtourism are [now] critical" and that rules are badly needed. Short-term holiday lets are fuelling a housing crisis, while tourists are contributing to pollution, litter, congestion and crime. In 2023, the local authority limited daily visitors to the Acropolis to prevent damage to the ancient monument. Other measures include a tourist tax and a temporary ban on issuing new short-term rental licences in certain parts of the city. Kraków hosted 9.4 million tourists in 2023 against a population of about 770,000. Poland's splendid former capital is renowned for its cultural appeal, but has sadly become a magnet for stag party groups and other visitors drawn by cheap booze. Locals are at their wit's end as the medieval city centre becomes the site of drunken debauchery after dark. Late-night alcohol bans and posters encouraging respectful behaviour are among the measures aimed at cleaning up the city, but in June 2024 locals filed a lawsuit against the town hall, accusing it of not doing enough. The lawyer behind the suit told AFP that Kraków was "like nowhere else in Europe", with tourists behaving "like Tarzan from the jungle". With a staggering 32 million annual visitors and a population of just 1.6 million, Barcelona has become a poster child for overtourism. This tourist tsunami has exacerbated a housing crisis in the city, with an explosion of short-term lets contributing to rising housing costs. Tourists are also blamed for increasing pollution, litter, noise and crime. Fed-up locals have taken to the streets, and some activists have taken to squirting tourists with water pistols in protest. The city council is taking measures to address the problems, banning cruise ships from a downtown terminal and hiking the tourist tax. The mayor has also pledged to ban holiday apartment rentals from 2028. A victim of its Game of Thrones fame – the city doubled as King's Landing in the hit show – Dubrovnik is one of Europe's most overloaded destinations. An analysis by holiday rental portal Holidu found that annual tourists outnumber locals by a whopping 27 to one, straining its infrastructure, damaging its historic character and putting its UNESCO World Heritage status at risk. As in Barcelona, locals are being priced out, though Dubrovnik hasn't seen the mass protests that have rocked the Catalan city. The mayor has restricted cruise ship arrivals, banned new holiday let permits and launched a 'Respect the City' campaign, among other measures. Staying in Croatia, the historic city of Split is suffering from overtourism too. Alongside concerns over prices and crowds, Split is grappling with the challenges of party tourism, including late-night noise, pub crawls and drunk tourists publicly urinating, even on the city's Roman ruins. Despite being a UNESCO World Heritage Site, Split has not gone to great lengths to rein in bad behaviour. There are signs warning visitors of fines, but in reality tourists are rarely penalised. Speaking to the UK's Daily Express in 2024, one local said they felt like a stranger in their own city, while another bemoaned the disruption that rampant party tourism has on daily lives. The picture-postcard city of Bruges endured eight million tourists in 2024 against a population of 120,000. Unsurprisingly, inhabitants of 'the Venice of the North', which is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, are up in arms. Authorities have restricted cruise ship docking, reduced tourism marketing and, more recently, banned hotel construction in the city centre and halted new holiday home permits. But these moves have done little to deter the daytrippers who continue to flood the city. Visitor caps and entry fees – like those employed by Venice and Dubrovnik – have been discussed, and a tax on short-term visitors will begin in 2027. Another so-called 'Venice of the North', Amsterdam hosted nine million overnight guests in 2024 versus a population of under a million. As is often the case, budget flights and cheap short-term holiday rentals are at the crux of the problem. Surging rents are putting the city centre out of reach for locals, who are particularly upset by tourists who come to take advantage of the city's drug laws and Red Light District. The city is now actively discouraging the wrong sort of tourist with a 'Stay Away' campaign, which launched in 2022. Other measures include fines for bad behaviour, a campaign highlighting cultural attractions and Europe's steepest tourist tax – a whopping 12.5% per night. York welcomed nine million visitors in 2023 against a population of around 200,000, and some locals have bemoaned a 'tourist invasion'. Retail outlets in the centre are geared towards visitors rather than residents, while the large number of holiday lets has made housing very expensive. Poor tourist behaviour is also a big problem. The local authority has issued a code of conduct for stag and hen parties, while purple signs dot the city centre urging visitors not to urinate on its medieval cobbled streets, respect taxi and bar staff and more. These measures are pretty limited, and the local authority is now discussing the idea of a tourist tax. A UNESCO World Heritage Site, the glorious Renaissance city of Florence has a population of 366,000 but attracts an astonishing 11 million tourists annually. The city centre is saturated with holiday lets that have driven up housing costs, alongside restaurants and souvenir shops that cater exclusively to visitors. As Cecilie Hollberg, director of the prestigious Accademia Gallery, noted in The Guardian last year, many tourists engage in "hit-and-run tourism", rushing around the main attractions largely for social media pics. The city council has responded with a tourist tax, a ban on new short-term private rentals, a ban on keyboxes on buildings and a campaign to entice visitors away from the overloaded city centre. Lisbon received 5.4 million overnight visitors in 2023 – that's around 10 times the population of the Portuguese capital – and the most pressing issue is the rapid growth of short-term holiday lets, which have reduced housing stock and pushed up prices for locals. A particular issue in the city is the surge in tourist tuk-tuks, which are "clogging the streets" and infuriating residents, according to Euronews. In response, the city council recently announced plans to halve tuk-tuk numbers in Lisbon. Wonderful, wonderful Copenhagen is becoming less wonderful thanks to overtourism. In 2023, the Danish capital saw more than 12 million international overnight stays against a population of around 600,000. But the city is taking a novel approach to the problem: instead of penalising tourists, it rewards them for good conduct. Under the Copenpay scheme, trialled in 2024, visitors who pick up litter, ride bikes instead of hiring cars or volunteer in urban parks can claim back free ice cream, cheaper museum tickets and other perks. The scheme was considered sufficiently successful to make a return for summer 2025. Budapest's annual tourist to inhabitant ratio is less stark than that of some other European capitals, coming in at under three to one in 2023, though numbers are rising. Again, short-term holiday rentals are perhaps the biggest overtourism issue in the city. In late 2024 residents of Budapest's sixth district, a densely populated tourist hub sometimes dubbed 'Budapest's Broadway', voted to ban short-term rentals, with the prohibition set to come into effect in 2026. The city of Bath – a UNESCO World Heritage Site – is having a tough time coping with overtourism. Buoyed by the Bridgerton effect, visitors are flocking to the Roman and Regency jewel in their droves, with six million-plus tourists a year against a population of only 100,000 or so. In June 2024, one local quoted in the Daily Express said that "on busy weekends you can barely walk down the street. It's absolute madness." Short-term holiday lets are among the biggest bugbears for Bathonians. The council has taken steps to regulate these rentals, but enforcement has proven difficult. Porto has seen a sharp increase in tourism in recent years, and in 2023 there were more than 10 annual tourists for every resident. Overtourism is pushing out traditional shops in the city centre in favour of soulless chains that cater to visitors, while short-term holiday rentals are displacing long-term residents. The city council has responded with a clever strategy: instead of banning the rentals, restrictions have been placed only in highly touristed areas, while less-visited districts are being actively promoted. This approach aims to create a more sustainable tourism model while revitalising neglected neighbourhoods. Vienna recorded a near-record 17.3 million overnight stays in 2023. Adopting a similar strategy to its counterpart in Porto, the Austrian capital's authorities are promoting a more sustainable tourism model, encouraging visitors to experience districts outside the city centre. With a view to attracting wealthier tourists, the emphasis is now on 'life-seeing' tourism, which focuses on individualised experiences rather than traditional sightseeing. The city has also introduced a tourist tax of 3.2%, which is added to the cost of accommodation. Istanbul, which straddles Europe and Asia, is an enormous metropolis with a population exceeding 15 million, so it may be a surprise that the City on the Seven Hills, as it is known, has a problem with overtourism. In fact, according to data from Euromonitor International Istanbul was the world's most visited city in 2023, with a jaw-dropping 20.2 million international arrivals. It dropped to second in 2024, behind Bangkok. Foreign sightseers over the age of eight are now charged £21 ($28) to enter the city's star attraction, the Hagia Sophia – a measure introduced in 2024 to help with renovation costs. As many as 3.5 million people visit the site (pictured) every year, leading to damage and even vandalism. Marseille's Notre-Dame-du-Mont was recently hailed the coolest neighbourhood in the world by Time Out, and the city's tourism sector is in "excellent health" according to Laurent Lhardit, president of the local tourist office. But the city, which recorded 16.2 million overnight stays in 2023, is starting to struggle with overtourism, particularly in the delicate coastal ecosystems of the Calanques on the outskirts of the city. These beguiling cliffs and beaches are besieged by daytrippers, so much so that erosion is now a serious concern. As a result, a quota has been introduced for the famed Sugiton coves, severely limiting daily visitor numbers. Milan attracted 7.6 million tourists in 2023, around six times the population of the city proper. While Italy's fashion capital tends to attract relatively well-heeled visitors, it still struggles with a vocal minority of rowdy tourists that come to party rather than shop or visit the magnificent cathedral. The city council has clamped down on late-night alcohol sales, and came close to banning late-night sales of ice cream and pizza in response to noise complaints (the proposal was eventually ditched due to opposition from local businesses). The third most visited city in Spain, Seville, which has a population of 700,000, hosts around three million tourists a year. Disgruntled locals have organised protests against the city's 'unsustainable' tourism model, bemoaning short-term lets, litter, pollution and more. Anti-tourism graffiti has appeared in parts of the city, while Euronews reported in 2024 that protestors had smeared excrement on the lockboxes of holiday apartments. Local authority action includes cutting off the water supply to illegal tourist apartments and a proposal to introduce an entry fee to the city's neo-Moorish Plaza de Espana. In 2024, Berlin welcomed nearly 13 million tourists versus a population of 3.8 million. The visitors to locals ratio isn't as pronounced as it is elsewhere, but overtourism is a big issue in particular pockets of the German capital. Residents in the popular neighbourhoods of Kreuzberg, Friedrichshain and Neukölln complain of increased noise, litter and – that perennial overtourism problem – displacement by short-term holiday rentals. Responses include a limit on short-term rentals, improved infrastructure and marketing campaigns for areas around the capital. Another Spanish city with a grave overtourism problem, parts of Málaga have the highest proportion of Airbnb properties in Spain (according to a study in El Pais newspaper). Overcrowding and disrespectful tourist behaviour have also helped cause widespread outrage among residents, and locals staged mass protests through the summer of 2024. "People feel like the city is collapsing," a local activist told the BBC. Starting in January 2025, city authorities froze new holiday rental registrations in 43 districts for three years. An online and billboard campaign is urging visitors to keep the city clean, keep bikes and scooters off the pavement, not play loud music and keep their clothes on in public. Given the large number of overtouristed European cities, you might be wondering where you can escape the crowds and expect a warmer welcome from locals who haven't tired of the constant influx. Comparatively undertouristed city breaks include the Slovenian capital of Ljubljana (pictured), Trieste in Italy, the Portuguese city of Guimaraes and Belfast in Northern Ireland. You may also want to look into visiting Czechia's Brno, the Hague in the Netherlands, England's Bristol and the French city of Lyon. Now discover the world's best-known tourist attractions ruined by commercialisation
Yahoo
10-03-2025
- Climate
- Yahoo
Greek farmers make surprising turn to new crops: 'It's just an experiment'
Greek farmers are experimenting with exciting new crops for some not-so-exciting reasons, according to Greek Reporter. Subtropical crops that tend to be more heat-resistant — like papayas, avocados, mangoes, dragon fruit, passion fruit, and guava — are seeing rising popularity among farmers in Crete as average temperatures continue to increase across the globe. "These trees have adapted remarkably well to the climate of Kyparissia," said local farmer Panos Adamopoulos. "The only problem we have encountered is the occasional strong winds that come from the Ionian Sea which can damage the crops. But we are working to find solutions to protect the trees." He also noted: "It's just an experiment to see whether such plants can thrive in Greece in the next five years or so." While the increased temperatures are opening up new commercial opportunities and changes in local food culture, water scarcity remains an issue. Mainstays such as olives and grapes require water that dwindling precipitation is failing to supply. The failure of staple crops due to the shifting climate has also been seen elsewhere, with Canadian farmers seeing reduced peach and wine grape yields. Agriculture is on the front line of shifting climate patterns. Cases like this show how some enterprising farmers are able to find opportunities in these circumstances, but pivoting comes with costs and risks. The end result for consumers will likely be a radically different set of options on grocery store shelves. Adamopoulos has been experimenting with subtropical fruit for three years and is still seeing low yields. Others who have made the investment earlier are reportedly seeing better returns. This is good news for those early adopters, but whatever is gained from subtropical climates reaching new areas is lost in other areas becoming uninhabitable. Some farmers are taking the opportunity to switch to more organic farming practices. Farmer Manolis Sourgiadakis has avoided pesticides by creatively using predator species on his papaya farm. What is the biggest reason you don't grow food at home? Not enough time Not enough space It seems too hard I have a garden already Click your choice to see results and speak your mind. "The spiders, being predators, do not harm the fruit, but feed only on the harmful insects that they trap in their webs," he said. Sourgiadakis is also able to skip commercial fertilizer by using horse manure. These are productive changes that improve soil health and support needed biodiversity. Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet.