Italian Government Officially Bans Cruise Ships in Venice

Italian Government Officially Bans Cruise Ships in Venice

The Italian government has announced the permanent ban of large cruise ships in the Venetian lagoon, after several years of protests, petitions, and threats of being put on UNESCO’s endangered list. The ban will be effective as of August 1st, 2021, and will prohibit ships exceeding 180 meters in length or weighing 25,000 tons from entering the lagoon, hoping to sustain Venice’s historic canals, waterways, and public squares.

The Venice cruise ships have already been a source of controversy for years, with an ongoing campaign led by the ‘No Grandi Navi‘ (No Big Ships) protest group and petitions by international architects and artists. Many regulations have been put in place over the years to reduce the number of ships arriving in Venice. However, as these ships provide significant contributions to the economy, there was never a substantial decision.Save this picture!

A few years ago, over 50 leading figures from architecture, art, film and fashion – Including Norman Foster, the director of London’s National Gallery Nicholas Penny, and the director of the Guggenheim Foundation Richard Armstrong, have signed a petition pleading Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi and the Italian Minister of Culture and Tourism, Dario Franceschini to keep large cruise ships out of Venice. The petition was created by the UNESCO-backed Association of the International Private Committees for the Safeguarding of Venice, and explains that not only are the ships are an “aesthetic intrusion” to the city, but they also create a “probable risk of catastrophe” to the fragile Lagoon surrounding Venice.

COURTESY -ARCHDAILY