NPR

In Amsterdam, Even The Tourists Say There Are Too Many Tourists

Fewer than one million people live in Amsterdam, but almost 20 million visit each year. A "night mayor" — and initiatives to address "overtourism" — encourage revelers to treat the city with respect.
Shamiro van der Geld, a former music producer and television presenter, was selected as the city's latest night mayor in February.

Bert Nap has had enough. On a recent night, the longtime Amsterdam resident opened his door to confront a gaggle of young, drunk, British men, all dressed as Elvis for a bachelor party, making a tremendous ruckus.

Nap asked them: "Why don't you do that in your own hometown?"

This was hardly the first time he'd been disturbed by late-night revelers. Many are tourists who vomit in his potted plants, urinate in his mailbox, and scream-sing outside his door. "My city is seen as one where anything goes," he says.

Standing in front of Nap's open door, one drunk Elvis replied: Amsterdam sells drugs and prostitution — and he and his friends partake. "We buy your streets, we are paying for it," he recalls the Elvis told him. "Just move, go live elsewhere."

Nap, a 59-year-old author of language textbooks, does not want to live anywhere else. He moved here 40 years ago as a student. He and his German-teacher wife, Conchita Lavalette, 55, raised

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