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CONCERT

5,000 fans attend Spanish gig for Covid-19 trial in Barcelona

Musicians on stage, spotlights flooding the arena and 5,000 fans dancing ecstatically: live music was back in Barcelona on Saturday, as a clinical trial sought pandemic-safe ways to celebrate mass events.

5,000 fans attend Spanish gig for Covid-19 trial in Barcelona
Attendees underwent Covid-19 Rapid Antigen Tests and are required to wear face masks but the social distancing rule will not be complied as part of a study on virus propagation. Photo: LLUIS GENE/AFP

“This is for one night only, so enjoy it,” said a presenter at Saint Jordi Arena just minutes before the start of the gig by one of Spain’s most popular bands, indie rockers Love of Lesbian.

Ahead of the party, everyone underwent mass screening and antigen tests, donning FPP2 surgical masks to attend the gig which comes after an unprecedented year of confinement, social distancing and very little social interaction.

“I’m so very, very excited. It’s been 18 months since we’ve been on stage and one of us up here is in tears!” shouted lead singer Santi Balmes after the first song which was appropriately called “Nobody in the streets”.

And his euphoria was shared by the audience.

Spectators attend a rock music concert by Spanish group Love of Lesbian at the Palau Sant Jordi in Barcelona on Saturday. Photo: LLUIS GENE/AFP

“It’s incredible, so exciting. We’d forgotten what it was like to be around other people, it’s as if it was my first-ever gig,” said Jordi Sanz who like everyone was in the mosh pit in front of the stage as all stands were left empty.

“We really wanted to do something different, to take a step towards normality,” said Marina Crespo, 25, who in spite of the security measures was trying “not get too close to people, to keep a bit of distance”.

Even so, the atmosphere was like travelling back to a time before the pandemic with excited crowds dancing, hugging each other and belting out songs at the top of their voices, or just drinking beers at the bar.

Nightclubs as testing centres

Behind the event is a group of music and festival promoters as well as a local hospital who say the safety measures, which include a special ventilation system, make it a safer space than inside a private home.

During the morning, the dance floors at three long-closed Barcelona nightclubs were transformed into makeshift field hospitals with nurses in blue carrying out antigen tests inside white canvas enclosures — and the results back in 10 minutes.

Health workers collect swab samples for Rapid Antigen Test (RAT) for the Covid-19 coronavirus from people who later attended a rock music concert in Barcelona. Photo: LLUIS GENE/AFP

When a person tested negative, the entry pass downloaded on an app on their phone was validated. The only other requirement was that they wear an FPP2 mask while inside the venue.

“We expect it to be completely safe. Over the next 14 days we will look at how many of the audience test positive for Covid and will report back,” explained Josep Maria Llibre, a doctor at the Germans Trias i Pujol hospital just north of Barcelona.

Light at the end of the tunnel

The aim is “to discover a way in which we can coexist with Covid and hold concerts which are completely safe,” said Ventura Barba, executive director of Barcelona’s Sonar festival which is one of the organisers.

“We hope it will be a turning point,” he told AFP.

This week, Sonar said its hugely popular electronic and dance music festival would be cancelled for the second year running because of the Covid crisis.

“The pandemic has been a nightmare for everyone, but for the music industry in particular,” he said.

According to a study published by Spain’s Music Federation, the European music industry lost 76 percent of its earnings in 2020.

The tickets for Saturday’s concert sold out within just a few hours. Photo: LLUIS GENE/AFP

For Love of Lesbian’s lead singer, Saturday’s gig was aimed at showing those in the music industry there was a way forward.

“It is creating a hole in the tunnel so the world of culture can see some light, or at least a possible way of doing things,” Balmes told AFP.

Although the pandemic forced the band to delay the release of their latest album by eight months, they feel luckier than most, given that many musicians  are “having a really bad time and even taking food parcels because they’ve got no income”.

The tickets for Saturday’s concert sold out within just a few hours.

“It was a real buzz but it’s logical: we’ve been living in a time of restraint and everyone’s had their handbrake on,” he said.

“We all need to let off a bit of steam and get back to our old lives.”

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BARCELONA

Barcelona aims to keep tourist coaches out by quadrupling parking fee

Authorities in Barcelona continue to look for ways to deal with the Catalan capital's mass tourism problem, with the latest plan aiming to reduce the number of tourist buses in the city centre by charging them a lot more to park.

Barcelona aims to keep tourist coaches out by quadrupling parking fee

Barcelona economic city councillor Jordi Valls has announced that Barcelona wants tackle the problem of tourist coaches by increasing the price of parking fees for them.

According to municipal data, parking in Barcelona currently has an average price of €20 per day for tourist buses. If the plan is approved, they will have to pay close to €80 instead.

Tourists who do not stay overnight in Barcelona do not usually appear in official figures, but the City Council estimates that they amount to around 10 million a year.

By comparison, annual overnight stays in hotels and tourist apartments in the city are around 12 million.

This mainly includes cruise passengers, but also those who are bused in for the day from other nearby locations.

According to data from the council, there are 156,000 coaches driving around in Barcelona every year, which equals an average of more than 40 per day. This has become a big problem, blocking traffic in some areas of the city, particularly surrounding the Sagrada Família and more recently Ronda Universitat.

The new proposal, dubbed Bus Zone 4.0 by the council, aims to limit the circulation of coaches to 70,000 in 2025 and plans on removing parking spaces for buses in Barcelona’s central areas.

The council wants to raise around €4 million annually from these parking fee increases, as well as discourage them from coming.

The fees must be included in modification of the 2025 tax ordinances, but this will require a majority vote and plenty of negotiations before it can be passed. 

If approved, it will become part of the Catalan government’s Measure for Tourism Management plan, which together a total of 55 measures with a budget of €254.7 million until 2027.

This will include continuing the Management Plan for High Traffic Spaces, which studies how to avoid the overcrowding of areas such as the Rambla or Sagrada Família. In addition, it includes the creation of a Citizen Return Fund for Tourism, the review of the tourist tax and the Special Urban Plan for Tourist Accommodation.

The last part includes the standout plan to get rid of all tourist apartments in Barcelona by 2028. But it also opens the door for unique hotels to open in the centre of the city, which could include more self-catering accommodation.

Barcelona has also recently introduced a new city tax, which will be in force from October.

The current fee is charged for up to seven nights and stands at €3.25 per night, but from October 2024, this will go up to €4 per night.

Tourists will pay this tax regardless of whether they stay in a bed and breakfast, on a cruise ship or at a five-star hotel. On top of this, visitors will also have to pay a regional tax on stays in tourist establishments.

This means that from this autumn, tourists to Barcelona will end up pay between €5 and €7.50 per night.

READ ALSO: Barcelona to crack down on tacky shops that ‘degrade’ city’s image

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