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Also today: Why climate adaptation must be architecture’s central project, and NYC mayoral race tightens.
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As Venice prepares to host Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s $10 billion wedding bash this week, local residents with the “No Space for Bezos” movement are vowing to crash the party and “take back” their city. The star-studded fête comes just as the summer season kicks into high gear, making it a lightning rod for anger about overtourism.

Like in other European hotspots that saw anti-tourism protests in recent weeks, Venetians say the city hasn’t done enough to curb the deluge of seasonal visitors. There are now more beds for tourists than for residents in the city center, and numerous grocery and hardware stores have given way to bars and souvenir shops. Read more from Alberto Brambilla and Alessandra Migliaccio today on CityLabBezos Wedding Draws Protests, Soul-Searching Over Tourism in Venice

— Linda Poon

More on CityLab

Why Climate Adaptation Must Become Architecture’s Central Project
“Architecture must reorient itself not as resignation, but as an act of creative resistance,” writes 2025 Venice Biennale Curator Carlo Ratti.

Iceland Keeps Feeding Its Tourist Boom. Will It Push Locals Out?
About six times as many visitors as residents came to the tiny island last year — and it wants even more.

NYC Mayoral Race Tightens as New Poll Shows Mamdani Primary Win
The outcome of the race could help define the path forward for the Democratic Party.

What we’re reading

  • In Seattle, Artspace’s vision for low-income housing is falling apart (Seattle Times)

  • It’s the car that explains America. Elon Musk only wishes he made it (Slate)

  • ‘I’m scared to death to leave my house’: immigrants are disappearing from the streets – can US cities survive? (Guardian)

  • Highway expansion wipes out popular Houston mural destination (Texas Chronicle)

  • How Texas’ hands-off approach to autonomous vehicles gave Tesla an opening (Verge)


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