Abstract

The transformation of mining and industrial spaces into tourist spaces is part of the debate surrounding the profound changes in the contemporary economies of developed European countries. The loss of competitive power of their traditional companies, the obsolescence of many manufacturing facilities, and the take-off of other industrial economies in remote parts of the world have led to the closure of thousands of mines and factories, with the approval of environmental groups. In some privileged places, these ex-industrialized spaces have recovered environmentally, been allocated aid for socio-economic reconversion, and reoriented the old mines and factories (now converted into industrial heritage), towards cultural and tourist uses. The successful examples of Ironbridge, Zollverein or Wieliczka, have created the illusion to managers, owners, and local population of being able to turn almost any ruin of the industrial and mining past into a tourist attraction. Starting in the 1990s, many ex-industrial spaces, which were far from the main urban centres, opted for this tourist transformation as a lifeline to slow down the loss of population and economic activities. Sometime after these projects of industrial tourism, the result can be evaluated with objective data that question the sustainability of the model and the resilience of these places. This paper focuses on questioning the sustainability and resilience of the tourist transformation of two former mining areas located in Spain (Almadén and Sabero), far from the axes of economic development.

Highlights

  • Modern society adheres to very different ethical values compared to those that influenced the social norms and customs of previous eras

  • Sustainability has gone viral, and its message resonates in every corner of the planet, even where the messenger is but a youngster whose only power is in their voice

  • The hope was to draw conclusions about whether this form of tourism, where visits are motivated mainly by interest in heritage related to the working culture of a particular place, was sustainable in locations that are peripheral to economic growth

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Summary

Introduction

Modern society adheres to very different ethical values compared to those that influenced the social norms and customs of previous eras. For example, sustainability is an ethical principal that connects generations and which we must always take into account in the evaluation of any activity that transforms the in which space we live. Sustainability embraces everything and allows us to establish a new value scale in which cost, aesthetics and originality are not the essential factors when judging a project, but rather its potential to survive through time, without altering the environment. Tourism continues to establish new records despite various crises in the economy, politics, and health. Regarding this last point, it is possibly still too early to evaluate the real consequences to Sustainability 2021, 13, 1077.

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