BARCELONA, Spain (AP) - In Barcelona’s residential Gràcia neighborhood known for its quaint squares, Txema Escorsa feels he is being left behind. The friendly faces of neighbors have been replaced by a non-stop flow of hard-partying foreigners, and his teacher’s salary can’t keep pace with the rising rent.
Spaniards packing water pistols blame impact of mass tourism for housing crunch
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) - In Barcelona’s residential Gràcia neighborhood known for its quaint squares, Txema Escorsa feels he is being left behind.
The friendly faces of neighbors in his apartment building have been replaced by a non-stop flow of hard-partying foreigners, and his teacher’s salary can’t keep pace with the rising rent.
“It is tough for me to imagine what to do next," he told The Associated Press in the living room of his two-bedroom apartment. "If I leave, will I be contributing to Barcelona losing its essence that comes from its locals? But there comes a time when I’m fed up."
Escorsa, 33, is just one of many residents who believe tourism has gone too far in the city famed for Antoni Gaudi’s La Sagrada Familia basilica and the Las Ramblas promenade, running roughshod over communities and exacerbating a housing crisis.