British holidaymakers staying at a four-star hotel in Spain have been prevented from leaving via the front door – after local police said it was not conforming with tourism regulations and locked it up.
Photos from today show steel cables and a large notice on the entrance to the Vivemar Hotel on the Costa del Sol saying ‘precintado’ or ‘sealed off’ in English.
Around 200 guests staying at the hotel in the popular resort of Benalmadena Costa are now having to exit the establishment via a ground-floor garage.
It is the latest development in a backlash against tourism in Spain that also saw furious protesters take to the streets of Mallorca and Ibiza at the weekend.
A spokesperson for the local town hall said it had instructed police to seal off the front entrance to the hotel after it failed to see it listed in the official tourist accommodation register.
Raul Campos told local paper Sur: ‘We have asked in the Junta de Andalucia’s Tourism Department and they say the company that operates the hotel is not in the official register.
‘That means it can’t be officially opened as it does not have the proper documentation.’
He went on to insist council officials had warned the hotel management about today’s police action at the end of March.

British holidaymakers staying at a four-star hotel in Spain have been prevented from leaving via the front door – after local police said it was not conforming with tourism regulations

Photos today show steel cables and a large notice on the entrance to the Vivemar Hotel on the Costa del Sol saying ‘precintado’ or ‘sealed off’ in English

Around 200 guests staying at the hotel in the popular resort of Benalmadena Costa are now having to exit the establishment via a ground-floor garage.
Manager Alberto Tusquellas, who a hotel receptionist said this evening was in meetings and unavailable, has blamed things on a ‘red tape’ hiccup.
He told local press a Spanish firm called Vive Resort Management SL began operating the hotel around a year ago with a sublease agreement using a previous operator’s registration number.
However, Mr Tusquellas said this had now been revoked because of a bureaucratic problem they were trying to fix.
The hotel operator’s version of events has been contradicted by the building’s owners who said the sublease was the subject of ongoing civil and criminal court action after they discovered the company they had signed a contract with to run the hotel had agreed to sublet it to another firm without their knowledge.
The claim of the owner, identified locally as María Jose García Vargas, could not be independently verified last night.
A receptionist at the hotel, which used to be called the Vistamar Hotel, said this evening: ‘I’m a bit rushed off my feet at the moment to check where our clients are from but I’d say there would be because we’ve got a bit of everything.
‘There’s almost 200 tourists staying here at the moment because we’re nearly full.
‘The police came this morning and sealed the front door. At the moment the only way in and out of the hotel for staff and guests is the garage car park.’
She denied reports guests had been stopped from using the swimming pool, insisting it was open as normal.

Tourists watch in Mallorca as demonstrators hold a banner reading ‘For the right to a decent life’

Activists have claimed more than 30,000 people attended the protest on Sunday

Protests also took place on the Spanish island of Ibiza in front of tourists eating their meals
‘The swimming pool is still open and the guests can use it as normal,’ the receptionist said.
‘The car park the guests are having to enter and exit the hotel via is a closed building but it’s on the ground floor.’
The seafront Vivemar Hotel describes itself online as a 138-room hotel with modern facilities.
Online travel websites say it has a ‘lush garden’ and guests can ‘relax by the seasonal outdoor swimming pool.’
One adds: ‘The on-site restaurant serves Mediterranean cuisine for dinner, complemented by a bar for refreshments.
‘A buffet breakfast is available each morning, providing a perfect start to the day.’
One recent guest writing an online review said: ‘The cleaning leaves much to be desired. Old room furniture and broken curtain fall out when you try to open the balcony door. I don’t recommend it to my worst enemy.’
Another wrote: ‘No towels or bed sheets on the first day. It was hard to order even toilet paper. Little cleaning. Bathrooms don’t do them daily. The dryer was broken. The reception service is abysmal and the buffet is poor quality. Not recommended.’
Benalmadena Town Hall could not be reached last night for comment.

Demonstrators hold a cardboard cruise boat during the protest in Palma de Mallorca
It comes after thousands of locals marched through the streets of Mallorca and Ibiza on Sunday to tell Brits to ‘go home’.
Fed-up locals were seen banging their drums and chanting slogans while marching by tourists enjoying their evening meals.
Activists claim more than 30,000 people took to the streets to voice their frustrations about the impact of tourism on the island.
Placards held up by marchers read: ‘Tourists go home’, ‘Mallorca is not for sale’ and ‘Mallorca is not your cash cow… go home.’
Footage shows Brits visibly shocked by the demonstrations, while some tourists were seen taking refuge on their accommodation balconies.
Other signs read: ‘Your vacations, our anxiety.’
The action is designed to ‘call attention to the social and environmental costs of overtourism.’
The protests have been organised by the Southern Europe Network Against Touristification (SET), and are supported by local activist groups.
Many locals living in tourist hotspots in Spain believe the industry’s model has become too excessive.
They say the numbers of visitors continue to increase year by year, creating an increasing demand on local resources.