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September 18, 2017

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One year on, Rio suffering post-Games blues

Rio de Janeiro hotels nearly doubled capacity for the Olympics, but had a problem once sports fans went home: The tourism industry had checked out with them.

After being criticized for not having enough rooms in the buildup to the Games, Rio energetically boosted bed numbers, hoping that this would also benefit the famous seaside city afterward. And during the Olympics last August things looked good: Occupancy reached 76 percent.

Fast forward to June this year, with Rio state nearly bankrupt and the city awash in crime: the occupancy rate was 37 percent.

By comparison, in June 2016 and 2015 occupancy was 50 percent.

“We raised our hotel capacity from 29,000 rooms in 2009 to 56,000 in 2016,” said Alfredo Lopes, head of the Rio hotel industry association. “What we didn’t do was attract more tourists.”

“The situation is really critical,” said Brazilian Hospitality and Food Federation president Alexandre Sampaio.

“Hotels agreed to big investments in order to meet the demands of the (Olympics authorities), with more modern establishments and the entry of new international chains. However, these investments are now compromised,” he said.

“If we don’t manage to get an acceptable occupancy rate in the near future, many hotels risk closing in the second half of the year.”

The situation is worst in the far-flung area of western Rio where the Olympic Park was built. Now that the Games are over, there is almost no reason why a tourist would want to be based there, with difficult access to sightseeing favorites like Copacabana beach or the Christ the Redeemer statue.

Many of the nearby sports arenas are either in a semi-abandoned state or are being used too seldomly to support the neighborhood’s economy or to attract new investment.

“Today almost no one goes to those hotels. Most have only one or two floors open, with 12 percent occupancy,” Lopes said. “No big hotel chain wants to invest millions just for the Olympics.”

But even more central areas are hurting.

The four-star Arena Ipanema hotel, right by the famous neighborhood’s beach, was inaugurated just days before the Olympic opening ceremony.

The manager, Douglas Viegas, described “a very serious occupancy crisis” in the hotel, which has 136 rooms.

“It’s absolutely not what we were expecting,” he said. “We were counting on an occupancy of 75 percent but today we’re at around 40 percent.”

Brazil is struggling to exit a deep two-year recession. It is also suffering a surge in violent crime.

Sampaio said the problem wasn’t just local.

“Rio is the gateway to Brazil and this situation can end up affecting the whole country,” he said.

“We’ve missed the train. We should have capitalized on the positive image of a perfectly organized Olympic Games.”




 

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