Enzo Foschi, a city councillor from the centre-left Democratic Party, said: “Having taken possession of the historic centre of Rome, making it into a huge theme park, now they want to trivialise the Colosseum. Rome is not Disneyland.”
Massimiliano Smeriglio, the city councillor in charge of culture, said the announcement of the deal left him “perplexed to say the least”.
“We cannot transform one of the most important monuments in the world into a theme park,” he wrote on social media. “The Airbnb promotion goes in the opposite direction to the one we are pursuing ... that of a heritage that is usable and accessible to everyone – tourists and Romans.”
He said Airbnb should cancel the “tourist-gladiator show” while still donating the $US1.5 million. That would demonstrate that the company was “a friend of Rome, protecting its unique artistic heritage without transforming it into a theme park”.
Viviana Piccirilli di Capua of the residents’ association of Rome’s historic centre, said: “This initiative is an insult to the city’s World Heritage status.”
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Some welcomed the deal with Airbnb. Federico Mollicone, the head of a parliamentary culture commission and a member of Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party, said: “We are absolutely in favour of the agreement between public and private in culture, through partnerships or sponsorships, provided that they support initiatives that are of scientific and cultural value approved by the ministry of culture.”
Amid the growing row over the deal, the Colosseum put out a statement, saying the objective of the accord was to promote “immersive activities in full respect of the monument, based on rigorous historical research”.
The gladiator experience would “bring an increasingly wider audience closer to the cultural richness of the amphitheatre”. The gladiatorial sparring would have no impact on access to the site because it will take place “outside opening hours”.
The Gruppo Storico Romano, an association that re-enacts gladiatorial fights, said the Airbnb event would be based on “solid historical and scientific foundations, the result of rigorous research” on how gladiators trained, fought and were equipped.
Critics accuse short-term let platforms such as Airbnb of damaging the social fabric of cities such as Rome, Florence, Venice and Bologna by fuelling overtourism and promoting a short-term let market which drives up rents and makes housing unaffordable for locals.
A group of residents’ associations said that short-term lets for tourists were causing the “abandonment of entire quarters of the city, devoured by hyper-tourism and a drastic reduction of properties” available for locals.
In Florence, campaigners embarked on a guerilla blitz in which they stuck red tape in the shape of a cross over the key boxes, which have become a much-resented symbol of the burgeoning short-term rental market.
The tape bears the words “Salviamo Firenze per viverci” or “Let’s save Florence so we can live here”.
Federico Maria Sardelli, a resident and orchestra director, said: “The city is being emptied of inhabitants because of this tourism model.”
The Telegraph, London
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