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TOURISM

Rafael Nadal launches hotel brand with Spain’s Meliá Group

Spanish tennis star Rafael Nadal on Thursday announced the launch of a new hotel brand with Spain's Meliá group that is planning to open some 20 hotels across the globe in the next five years.

Rafael Nadal launches hotel brand with Spain's Meliá Group
Spanish tennis player Rafael Nadal and CEO of Melia Hotel Group, Gabriel Escarrer (L) pose before giving a joint press conference to present the group's new line of hotels Zel, in Madrid on December 15, 2022. (Photo by OSCAR DEL POZO / AFP)

Inspired by the “Mediterranean lifestyle”, the new “Zel” chain is expected to open its first hotel in 2023 in Mallorca in the Balearic Islands where 36-year-old Nadal was born and where Meliá Hotels International was founded in 1956.

Nadal, one of the world’s two top-ranked tennis players, and Meliá, Spain’s leading hotel group which operates more than 400 establishments across the globe, will jointly own the company.

They did not specify who would hold what percentage of the shares.

The aim is that “over the next five years”, the chain will open “more than 20 hotels across the world”, Nadal told reporters in Madrid.

Meliá said the new chain would establish hotels “in destinations with a clear focus on premium leisure tourism”, such as Spain, France, Italy or Croatia but also the Caribbean, southeast Asia and the Middle East.

It would also be present in the main tourist capitals with openings already planned in London, Paris and Madrid.

Initially, 80 percent of the hotels will be set up in existing structures “which will undergo a radical transformation” to adapt them to Zel’s “Mediterranean character”, said Meliá chairman Gabriel Escarrer.

The ultimate objective is that most hotels will be specially built for Zel, which means “sky” in the dialect of Catalan that is spoken in Mallorca, said Escarrer, who is also from the Balearic Islands.

The idea, he said, was to put the emphasis on Mediterranean culture with “its good life, gastronomy and parties” — an idea which customers found “very appealing”.

Nadal said his involvement in the hotel chain did not mean he was ending his sporting career.

“I’m trying to make sure that my retirement is put off for as long as possible,” he told reporters.

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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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