A criticized Airbnb deal will let users play gladiator in Rome's
Colosseum
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[November 15, 2024]
By PAOLO SANTALUCIA
ROME (AP) — The ancient Roman Colosseum will be the venue of gladiator
fights — albeit staged — for the first time in two millennia under a
$1.5 million sponsorship deal with Airbnb that aims to promote “a more
conscious tourism.”
But some visitors to the monument Thursday, as well as housing
activists, were skeptical about the value of the arrangement, citing
ongoing controversies in many cities over the role of short-term rental
platforms in fueling overtourism and limiting affordable housing for
residents and students.
Under the deal announced by Airbnb and the Colosseum on Wednesday, the
sponsorship by the short-term rental giant will cover the renewal of an
educational program inside the ancient Roman amphitheater covering the
history of the structure and gladiators.
Eight of the platform's users and their plus-ones will be able to
participate in faux gladiator fights after the Colosseum's closing time
on May 7-8, taking the same underground route used by gladiators in
ancient Rome to reach the arena. People can apply for the experience on
Nov. 27 at no cost, and the “gladiators” will be chosen by lottery.

The superintendent of the Colosseum Archaeological Park, Alfonsina
Russo, told The Associated Press that the deal is in conjunction with
the release of Ridley Scott's new film “Gladiators II," which opened in
Italy on Thursday.
Russo characterized the sponsorship arrangement as one of the many such
deals to help finance projects at the park.
The Italian fashion brand Tod's, for example, has funded a multimillion
renovation of the Roman monument, including a cleaning, replacing the
locking system of arches with new gates and redoing the subterranean
areas.
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Tourists walk by the ancient Roman Colosseum as it's reflected in a
puddle, in Rome, Sept. 5, 2024. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini, file)
 Alberto Campailla, the coordinator
of the Nonna Roma nonprofit organization that focuses on housing and
food for the poor, called the campaign with Airbnb “a disgrace,” and
a form of “touristification.”
Airbnb and other platforms offering short-term rentals “are
literally driving people out of not only the city center, but also
the outskirts and suburban neighborhoods,” Campailla said.
Tourists from other European cities grappling with overtourism also
took issue with the deal.
“It seems to me that the purpose of the Colosseum today is to be a
tourist attraction, but not to create an amusement park within it,”
said Jaime Montero, a tourist visiting from Madrid. “In the end,
tourism eats the essence of the cities, here in Rome, as in other
capitals.”
Visiting from Naples, Salvatore Di Matteo saw the deal as “yet
another takeover of the territory” by big companies.
"If they start to touch sacred monuments such as the Colosseum here
in Rome, it is obviously something that should make us think and is,
in any case, a bit worrying," he said.
The Colosseum is the most important and largest amphitheater
constructed by the ancient Romans. Built in the 1st century, it was
the center of popular entertainment, hosting hunts and gladiator
games, until the 6th century.
____
Colleen Barry contributed from Milan.
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