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19 pages, 2543 KB  
Article
Multisensory Interactions in Greenway Plazas of Differing Openness and Effects on User Behaviors
by Zhaohui Peng, Wenping Liu, Mingjun Teng, Yangyang Zhang, Abdul Baess Keyhani and Pengcheng Wang
Urban Sci. 2026, 10(1), 60; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci10010060 - 18 Jan 2026
Viewed by 447
Abstract
Spatial openness affects the subjective evaluation of soundscape, landscape, and thermal perceptions, leading to various restoration effects and recreational behaviors. However, the literature lacks studies investigating the effects of multisensory interactions under different levels of spatial openness in plazas on users’ behaviors in [...] Read more.
Spatial openness affects the subjective evaluation of soundscape, landscape, and thermal perceptions, leading to various restoration effects and recreational behaviors. However, the literature lacks studies investigating the effects of multisensory interactions under different levels of spatial openness in plazas on users’ behaviors in urban greenways. Thus, this study contributes to the enhancement of recreational experiences and the environmental design of urban greenways by examining the interaction between multisensory evaluations and recreational behaviors in greenway plazas with different levels of spatial openness. Three types of plazas (enclosed, semi-enclosed, open) were selected along an urban greenway to analyze interactions through in situ measurements, questionnaires, and behavior observation. The results showed that people rated the environment as the quietest and coolest in enclosed plazas, although the sound pressure level of these plazas was the highest. Furthermore, the visual evaluation (VE) was mostly correlated with acoustic evaluation (AE) in plazas with high openness, while the correlation effect between AE and thermal evaluation (TE) was only significant in enclosed plazas. In other words, AE was the key factor targeting the improvement in comfort in greenway plazas. Secondly, improving AE was more effective for stimulating the frequency of interactive activities in enclosed plazas, compared to improving TE. However, AE had a negative effect on the time that people were willing to spend on interactive activities in semi-enclosed plazas. Finally, these findings provide corresponding strategies for creating comfortable audio, visual, and thermal environments in greenway plazas with different levels of openness, as well as strategies for enhancing the recreational experiences of visitors. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Urban Governance for Health and Well-Being)
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16 pages, 994 KB  
Article
Low-Impact Travel, High-Value Tourism? Evidence from a Rural Destination
by Fiona Jane McKenna and James Hanrahan
Sustainability 2025, 17(23), 10863; https://doi.org/10.3390/su172310863 - 4 Dec 2025
Viewed by 655
Abstract
Rural destinations face a difficult challenge in balancing economic vitality with the environmental and infrastructural pressures, including congestion of car-dependent destinations. Despite growing calls for more sustainable mobility, destination management organisations (DMOs) can assume that private vehicles are vital for rural access, fearing [...] Read more.
Rural destinations face a difficult challenge in balancing economic vitality with the environmental and infrastructural pressures, including congestion of car-dependent destinations. Despite growing calls for more sustainable mobility, destination management organisations (DMOs) can assume that private vehicles are vital for rural access, fearing that alternatives such as soft mobility or public transport may have an adverse effect on visitor satisfaction and spending. Yet, empirical evidence to support or challenge these assumptions remains limited. This study addresses this gap by analysing visitor survey data (N = 512) from international and domestic tourists to a rural destination in County Clare, Ireland. Using one-way and two-way ANOVA, along with chi-square and logistic regression analyses, we examine how transport mode relates to visitor satisfaction, daily expenditure, and overnight stay behaviour. Results revealed that visitor satisfaction does not significantly differ across transport modes, suggesting that sustainable mobility options (e.g., walking, cycling, public transport) do not impact the visitor experience. While transport mode had a minimal impact on spending overall, overnight visitors, regardless of how they travelled, spent significantly more than day-trippers (p < 0.001), identifying length of stay as the key economic driver. Moreover, soft mobility users (walking and cycling) had a higher likelihood of staying overnight than car users, while tour bus users were significantly less likely to do so. However, among those who did stay overnight, tour bus users reported the highest daily spending, revealing a complex relationship between mobility type and economic impact. Overall, the results question long-held assumptions linking car use with rural tourism success. Low-impact transport options, such as soft mobility and public transport, were found to sustain visitor satisfaction and spending outcomes comparable to car travel, suggesting their integration could contribute to more balanced, sustainable mobility planning. Full article
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21 pages, 2660 KB  
Article
Sustainable Financing of Cultural Landscapes: Insights from Japan’s Furusato Nozei System
by Yan Tang, Ruochen Ma, Shixian Luo, Jing Xie, Sihan Zhang, Jing Zhang and Katsunori Furuya
Tour. Hosp. 2025, 6(5), 259; https://doi.org/10.3390/tourhosp6050259 - 1 Dec 2025
Viewed by 1452
Abstract
Cultural landscapes are facing increasing challenges in terms of sustainable financing, owing to fiscal austerity and limited public funding. This study explores tourists’ willingness to pay (WTP) for the conservation of cultural landscapes through Japan’s Furusato Nozei (Tax payment to hometown)—a policy that [...] Read more.
Cultural landscapes are facing increasing challenges in terms of sustainable financing, owing to fiscal austerity and limited public funding. This study explores tourists’ willingness to pay (WTP) for the conservation of cultural landscapes through Japan’s Furusato Nozei (Tax payment to hometown)—a policy that pairs tax deductions with tangible “return gifts,” institutionalising a form of mixed (or “impure”) altruism that can convert intention into action. Using a survey of 500 visitors to Shibamata, Tokyo, we estimate an integrative model that links psychological pathways (motivation → destination evaluation), behavioural investments (time, spending, and interactions with residents), and socio-demographic characteristics. To analyse the collected data, we use partial least squares structural equation modelling. Results reveal that interaction with local communities has the strongest direct effects on WTP, while motivation influences WTP indirectly through destination evaluation. Age shows a negative relationship, whereas marital status has a positive one; income and gender are not significant predictors. These findings suggest that institutional incentives embedded in Furusato Nozei can transform altruistic intention into actual financial support for heritage conservation. This study contributes theoretically by linking institutional design to behavioural intention–action gaps and practically by providing insights for participatory and incentive-based heritage financing. The findings are based on a single-site case in Shibamata, Tokyo, and should therefore be interpreted within its local and cultural context. Full article
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17 pages, 1491 KB  
Article
The Economic Evaluation of Cultural Ecosystem Services: The Case of Recreational Activities on the “Via degli Dei Pilgrim Route” (Italy)
by Iacopo Bernetti, Anna Morri, Marta Fossati, Tommaso Ventura and Claudio Fagarazzi
Sustainability 2025, 17(22), 10179; https://doi.org/10.3390/su172210179 - 13 Nov 2025
Viewed by 961
Abstract
Recreation, aesthetic appreciation, identity, and spiritual values are among the cultural ecosystem services (CES) produced by long-distance historic and pilgrimage trails. However, it is still difficult to convert these experiential benefits into quantifiable economic flows. This study collected 560 valid responses from an [...] Read more.
Recreation, aesthetic appreciation, identity, and spiritual values are among the cultural ecosystem services (CES) produced by long-distance historic and pilgrimage trails. However, it is still difficult to convert these experiential benefits into quantifiable economic flows. This study collected 560 valid responses from an in-field survey conducted along the Via degli Dei (Bologna–Florence). Robust visitor clusters were created using Gower dissimilarities, Partitioning Around Medoids (PAM), silhouette diagnostics, and Factor Analysis for Mixed Data (FAMD). Each cluster was then profiled according to seasonal patterns, information channels, individual-level, per-category expenditures (accommodation, food, transport, services, and equipment), as well as motivations. Four segments are identified—Student Campers (low-budget, peak-summer), Working-Age Male B&B Hikers (short stays, B&B), Young Women on Mixed Lodging (mixed accommodation), and Midlife Comfort-Seekers (higher spend, shoulder-season)—underpinning our spending, seasonality, and managerial implications. Student Campers had the lowest absolute expenditures, while Midlife Comfort-Seekers had the highest (median lodging €180; food €175). The study offers practical levers for route governance (targeted communications, low-impact lodging strategies, shoulder-season promotion) to improve local value capture while reducing environmental pressure by connecting typologies to monetary CES flows. The findings provide a reproducible model for implementing recreational CES on historical-cultural tours. Full article
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26 pages, 1009 KB  
Article
Quantifying GHG Emissions of Korean Domestic Tourism: Spend-Based Multiregional EEIO Approach to Category 6 of Scope 3
by Dasom Jeong, ChangKeun Park, Yongbin Lee, Soomin Park and JiYoung Park
Sustainability 2025, 17(22), 10174; https://doi.org/10.3390/su172210174 - 13 Nov 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 845
Abstract
Tourism is a fast-growing sector that generates a significant greenhouse gas (GHG) footprint, yet subnational data needed to measure the sector remain scarce. Quantifying tourism-related emissions is essential for effective climate policy and alignment with international targets. This study contributes to quantifying tourism [...] Read more.
Tourism is a fast-growing sector that generates a significant greenhouse gas (GHG) footprint, yet subnational data needed to measure the sector remain scarce. Quantifying tourism-related emissions is essential for effective climate policy and alignment with international targets. This study contributes to quantifying tourism sector GHG emissions using the 2023 Korean National Travel Survey data and a spend-based environmentally extended input–output (EEIO) model. Expenditure data were mapped onto the 33-sector multiregional EEIO framework, estimating a total of 2623 tCO2eq emissions by region, expenditure type, and industry sector in 2023, where about 73% of the total was attributed to tourism-related sectors with the sample data, 24,282. The results illustrate how tourism emissions are shaped especially by transportation systems and regional context. Provinces that surround metropolitan cities in the mainland, for example, Gyeonggi and Gangwon Provinces near Seoul and Incheon, and Gyeongnam Province neighboring Busan and Ulsan, record higher emissions due to large travel volumes from these metropolitan cities and energy-intensive transportation services. Jeju Island stands out as an outlier, with disproportionately high emissions relative to its size, driven by reliance on aviation, which significantly raises its per-visitor footprint. Sectoral analysis identified transportation services, agriculture, electricity, and gas as key sectors. By providing detailed provincial-level data, this study offers a first empirical foundation to corporate Category 6 of Scope 3 reporting and supports central and local governments in designing region-specific climate strategies associated with tourism-related sectors. Full article
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17 pages, 374 KB  
Article
Segmenting Luxury Tourists Using Income and Expenditure: A Typology and Determinants from International Visitor Data
by Gyu Tae Lee, Soon Hwa Kang, Young-Rae Kim and Chang Huh
Sustainability 2025, 17(21), 9705; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17219705 - 31 Oct 2025
Viewed by 1948
Abstract
Understanding luxury tourists required a more comprehensive approach than traditional expenditure-based segmentation, which often overlooked travelers’ financial capacity. This study therefore aimed to develop and validate a new typology of luxury tourists by jointly analyzing income and expenditure patterns using the International Visitor [...] Read more.
Understanding luxury tourists required a more comprehensive approach than traditional expenditure-based segmentation, which often overlooked travelers’ financial capacity. This study therefore aimed to develop and validate a new typology of luxury tourists by jointly analyzing income and expenditure patterns using the International Visitor Survey of South Korea. The study addressed the need to capture both tourists’ economic capability and consumption behavior to enhance the precision of market segmentation and support sustainable destination management. Using the Jenks natural breaks classification and logistic regression, four distinct tourist types were identified: economy, spurious, scrooge, and premier, each reflecting unique combinations of income and expenditure. The results revealed that age, nationality, occupation, and trip purpose significantly influenced tourists’ classification. Younger and middle-aged professionals from East Asia were more likely to belong to high-income and high-expenditure groups, whereas Western tourists tended to spend more relative to their income. This income–expenditure typology advanced theoretical understanding of luxury tourism segmentation and provided practical insights for destination marketing organizations. The findings offered new insights for understanding how the alignment between tourists’ financial capacity and spending behavior can redefine strategies for sustainable and inclusive tourism development. Full article
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15 pages, 1003 KB  
Article
Integrating Hard and Green Infrastructure for Sustainable Tourism: A Spatial Analysis of Saudi Regions
by Muhannad Mohammed Alfehaid
Sustainability 2025, 17(20), 9295; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17209295 - 20 Oct 2025
Viewed by 1117
Abstract
Tourism performance often depends on the joint provision of built (“hard”) and environmental (“green”) infrastructure, yet their combined effects are not well established. Using official data for Saudi Arabia’s 13 regions (2023–2024), this study constructs composite hard and green indices, estimates ordinary least [...] Read more.
Tourism performance often depends on the joint provision of built (“hard”) and environmental (“green”) infrastructure, yet their combined effects are not well established. Using official data for Saudi Arabia’s 13 regions (2023–2024), this study constructs composite hard and green indices, estimates ordinary least squares models with heteroskedasticity-consistent inference, and probes spatial heterogeneity using geographically weighted regression (exploratory) alongside k-means/hierarchical clustering. Hard infrastructure is the strongest and most consistent correlate of overnight visitors and spending, whereas green infrastructure exhibits non-positive marginal effects over the observed range of hard capacity; a negative, statistically significant Hard × Green interaction indicates diminishing returns to greening as built capacity increases. Clustering differentiates metropolitan hubs from nature-oriented regions, underscoring place-specific policy needs. Practically, results support sequencing prioritizing foundational access and basic accommodation in under-served regions, quality upgrades and public-realm enhancement in mature centers, and targeted green interventions where marginal gains are greatest. Key limitations (cross-sectional design; coarse green metrics) motivate richer environmental indicators and longitudinal data to clarify dynamics and thresholds over time. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue BRICS+: Sustainable Development of Air Transport and Tourism)
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28 pages, 3339 KB  
Article
Uncorking Rural Potential: Wine Tourism and Local Development in Nemea, Greece
by Angelos Liontakis and Elona Bogdani
Economies 2025, 13(10), 287; https://doi.org/10.3390/economies13100287 - 1 Oct 2025
Viewed by 1246
Abstract
This study investigates the economic role of wine tourism in Nemea, Greece, a prominent Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) wine-producing region. Employing a mixed-methods approach, the research combines interviews with local stakeholders and a structured post-wine-tasting visitor survey to assess wine tourism’s contribution [...] Read more.
This study investigates the economic role of wine tourism in Nemea, Greece, a prominent Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) wine-producing region. Employing a mixed-methods approach, the research combines interviews with local stakeholders and a structured post-wine-tasting visitor survey to assess wine tourism’s contribution to local development. A two-step multivariate analysis, incorporating Multiple Correspondence Analysis and Hierarchical Cluster Analysis, reveals five distinct visitor profiles differing in spending behaviour, familiarity with the destination, and engagement patterns. While high-spending visitors support winery revenues, their limited local integration reduces their broader developmental impact. Conversely, younger and repeat domestic visitors offer more dispersed economic benefits through overnight stays, gastronomy, and cultural participation. In addition, local stakeholders highlight the region’s viticultural identity and growing tourism interest as strengths but also note persistent weaknesses such as inadequate infrastructure, limited coordination, and underdeveloped visitor services. The study concludes that visitor segmentation offers actionable insights for enhancing wine tourism’s developmental role. Targeted strategies tailored to specific visitor types are essential for improving integration with the local economy. These findings contribute to ongoing discussions on how wine tourism can act as a lever for inclusive, sustainable rural development in traditional wine regions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Economic Indicators Relating to Rural Development)
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19 pages, 717 KB  
Article
Bridging Visitors’ and Residents’ Perspectives in Destination Planning: A Sustainability and Governance Case Study of Piraeus Port
by Nikolaos Georgopoulos, Ioannis Katsanakis, Evangelia Kopanaki, Sotirios Varelas, Asterios Stroumpoulis, Ioannis Anastasopoulos, Chryssoula Konstantopoulou, Nikoletta Klada and Georgios Tsoupros
Tour. Hosp. 2025, 6(4), 196; https://doi.org/10.3390/tourhosp6040196 - 1 Oct 2025
Viewed by 1606
Abstract
Tourism planning in port cities faces the dual challenge of maximizing economic benefits while mitigating environmental and social pressures. This study examines the case of Piraeus, Greece, by integrating insights from both visitors and residents to explore how stakeholder perceptions can inform sustainable [...] Read more.
Tourism planning in port cities faces the dual challenge of maximizing economic benefits while mitigating environmental and social pressures. This study examines the case of Piraeus, Greece, by integrating insights from both visitors and residents to explore how stakeholder perceptions can inform sustainable and resilient destination planning. Drawing on primary data collected through large-scale surveys of visitors and local residents, the analysis applies a multidimensional framework to assess economic, environmental, and social impacts of tourism. Findings reveal strong visitor spending and cultural engagement alongside concerns about infrastructure, pollution, and service quality. Residents acknowledge job creation and business activity but emphasize rising living costs, overcrowding, and limited inclusion in tourism governance. By bridging these perspectives, this study highlights the importance of multiple-stakeholder analysis for integrated tourism planning and proposes governance strategies to enhance sustainability and resilience in port destinations such as Piraeus. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Rethinking Destination Planning Through Sustainable Local Development)
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20 pages, 1243 KB  
Article
From Pre-Pandemic to Post-COVID-19: Tracking Shifts in Visitors’ Profiles in Santa Cruz, Galapagos
by Andrea Muñoz-Barriga, Anna Öckler, Emilio Damian Andrade and Kevin Rojas
Sustainability 2025, 17(18), 8302; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17188302 - 16 Sep 2025
Viewed by 2357
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted tourism systems worldwide, particularly ecologically sensitive and tourism-dependent regions such as the Galapagos Islands. This study investigated the impact of the pandemic on profiles of tourists visiting Santa Cruz Island by comparing an analysis from 2019 to data we [...] Read more.
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted tourism systems worldwide, particularly ecologically sensitive and tourism-dependent regions such as the Galapagos Islands. This study investigated the impact of the pandemic on profiles of tourists visiting Santa Cruz Island by comparing an analysis from 2019 to data we gathered in 2021. Using survey-based data and cluster analysis, we identified significant shifts in tourist origin, travel modalities, and expenditure patterns. Results showed a marked increase in domestic tourism, with Ecuadorians becoming the dominant visitor group during the pandemic, primarily favoring land-based tourism and shorter stays. In contrast, international tourists remained present in niche, higher-spending segments associated with cruise-based and multi-island itineraries. These findings highlight a temporary yet meaningful transformation in the tourism dynamic, driven by changes in risk perception, economic factors, and policy restrictions. The emergence of these segments underscores the need for adaptive destination management strategies that align with sustainability goals, conservation priorities, and socioeconomic resilience. We also demonstrated the value of structured surveys as a cost-effective tool for evidence-based decision-making in resource-constrained settings. Full article
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19 pages, 876 KB  
Article
State-Led Tourism Infrastructure and Rural Regeneration: The Case of the Costa da Morte Parador (Galicia, Spain)
by Fidel Martínez-Roget and Brais Castro
Land 2025, 14(8), 1636; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14081636 - 13 Aug 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2510
Abstract
Peripheral rural coastal areas in Europe face persistent structural challenges, including demographic decline, aging populations, and the collapse of traditional sectors like fishing. These are further aggravated by environmental disasters, which weaken local economies. Public sector intervention is therefore essential, not only to [...] Read more.
Peripheral rural coastal areas in Europe face persistent structural challenges, including demographic decline, aging populations, and the collapse of traditional sectors like fishing. These are further aggravated by environmental disasters, which weaken local economies. Public sector intervention is therefore essential, not only to provide an immediate response, but also to guarantee long-term solutions. This study explores the contribution of state-led tourism infrastructures to rural development and post-disaster recovery, taking the Parador Costa da Morte in Galicia as a case study. Based on data from a survey of parador guests, it identifies tourist profiles through factor and cluster motivation analysis. The parador’s impacts on the surrounding region are assessed by examining tourists’ travel patterns and spending behavior, as well as the analysis of secondary data on regional changes in tourism supply and demand. The results show widely differing motivations and, despite varying visitor profiles, the predominance of a tourism typology that generates significant local spillovers. These findings support the potential of high-quality, publicly driven tourism initiatives to stimulate the economy of structurally disadvantaged rural areas. The article ends with recommendations for tourism strategies aligned with local recovery and development goals. Full article
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23 pages, 1185 KB  
Article
The Appeal of Rural Hospitality in Serbia and Italy: Understanding Tourist Motivations and Key Indicators of Success in Sustainable Rural Tourism
by Aleksandra Vujko, Drago Cvijanović, Hamid El Bilali and Sinisa Berjan
Tour. Hosp. 2025, 6(2), 107; https://doi.org/10.3390/tourhosp6020107 - 7 Jun 2025
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 3032
Abstract
Rural tourism is growing as travelers seek authentic experiences with local traditions, culture, and heritage. This form of tourism plays a key role in the sustainable development of rural areas by effectively utilizing rural resources. To ensure its continued success, best practices must [...] Read more.
Rural tourism is growing as travelers seek authentic experiences with local traditions, culture, and heritage. This form of tourism plays a key role in the sustainable development of rural areas by effectively utilizing rural resources. To ensure its continued success, best practices must be adopted to enhance the visitor experience while ensuring long-term viability. Research on rural tourism in the villages of Sremski Karlovci, Irig, and Vrdnik in Fruška Gora (Serbia) and Pienza, Montalcino, and San Gimignano in Tuscany (Italy), involving 357 tourists, identified four key factors influencing their experiences: ‘Organic Heritage’, ‘Authentic Comfort’, ‘Authentic Flavors’, and ‘Warm Farmstead’. These factors show that the motivations driving tourists to rural destinations and village accommodations are universal. However, Tuscan villages attract more tourists due to their superior infrastructure, diversified offerings, and strong international promotion, attracting wealthier tourists who tend to stay longer and spend more. Stakeholder research (58 participants) confirmed that Fruška Gora must improve infrastructure, diversify experiences, and strengthen promotional efforts to enhance sustainability and competitiveness. These changes are essential for the long-term success of rural tourism businesses in the future. Full article
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18 pages, 1749 KB  
Article
Relationship Between Perceived Authenticity, Place Attachment, and Tourists’ Environmental Behavior in Industrial Heritage
by Nengjie Qiu, Jiawei Wu, Haibo Li, Chen Pan and Jiaming Guo
Sustainability 2025, 17(11), 5152; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17115152 - 4 Jun 2025
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 4502
Abstract
As a crucial component of cultural heritage, industrial heritage possesses considerable cultural, historical, and economic significance. The key challenge for industrial heritage sites is to foster eco-conscious actions among visitors while boosting tourism spending. Based on the S-O-R theory, we constructed a relationship [...] Read more.
As a crucial component of cultural heritage, industrial heritage possesses considerable cultural, historical, and economic significance. The key challenge for industrial heritage sites is to foster eco-conscious actions among visitors while boosting tourism spending. Based on the S-O-R theory, we constructed a relationship model between authenticity, place attachment and environmental responsibility behavior through structural equation modeling and tested it with the survey data of tourists in Maoming open-pit mine ecological park. Findings reveal that both the object-related authenticity and the existential authenticity of the experience enhance the sense of reliance and belonging to the place, with the former also directly promoting visitors’ eco-conscious actions. In contrast, experiential authenticity does not exert a direct effect on eco-conscious actions. The sense of place reliance and identity are found to be significantly and positively linked to eco-conscious behavior. Furthermore, place reliance and identity act as intermediaries in the relationship between object authenticity, experiential authenticity, and eco-conscious behavior, serving as a sequential mediating factor. The study suggests strategies such as augmenting financial support to preserve the authenticity of the site, prioritizing the enhancement of infrastructure and the creation of cultural offerings to elicit emotional responses, and reinforcing emotional bonds to encourage eco-conscious actions. Full article
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20 pages, 829 KB  
Article
Destination Competitiveness Through the Lens of Tourist Spending: A Case Study of the Canary Islands
by Ana María Barrera-Martínez, Agustín Santana-Talavera and Eduardo Parra-López
Sustainability 2025, 17(7), 3262; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17073262 - 7 Apr 2025
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 3700
Abstract
The competitiveness of tourism destinations is a multidimensional concept encompassing natural and cultural resources, infrastructure, accessibility, and services that cater to an increasingly discerning tourism market. Business ecosystems enhance these competitive conditions by adapting to consumers seeking high-value, differentiated experiences. This study examined [...] Read more.
The competitiveness of tourism destinations is a multidimensional concept encompassing natural and cultural resources, infrastructure, accessibility, and services that cater to an increasingly discerning tourism market. Business ecosystems enhance these competitive conditions by adapting to consumers seeking high-value, differentiated experiences. This study examined the relationship between accommodation supply and tourist expenditure in the Canary Islands based on a sample of 38,071 visitors from the 2024 Tourist Expenditure Survey (EGT) of the Canary Islands Statistics Institute. Using Python and R for statistical processing, the findings revealed distinct spending patterns across accommodation types, from five-star hotels to peer-to-peer rentals, demonstrating how supply diversification influences competitiveness. The results reinforce prior research on the significance of investing in infrastructure, technology, and human capital to optimise the tourist experience. Tourist expenditure serves as an indicator of competitiveness, reflecting visitor preferences and the destination’s capacity to meet them. Accommodation choice is identified as a key determinant of spending patterns and their distribution within the local economy. This study provides an analytical basis for evaluating tourism strategies, emphasising the strategic importance of accommodation heterogeneity. It advances methodological understanding of tourist spending behaviour, offering a practical framework for destination development and strategic planning. Full article
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19 pages, 1133 KB  
Article
Economic and Socio-Cultural Development Dimension—Two Lake-Protected Areas’ Sustainability: A Case of Hungary and Serbia
by Brankica Tabak, Igor Trišić, Snežana Štetić, Florin Nechita, Mirjana Ilić, Milica Obadović and Ada Ioana Dobrescu
Land 2025, 14(3), 479; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14030479 - 26 Feb 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2135
Abstract
The Balaton Uplands National Park (BUNP) and Palić Nature Park (PNP) have significant tourism potential for the development of specific tourism forms. These lake destinations offer not just natural features but also a developed infrastructure and a variety of events that are important [...] Read more.
The Balaton Uplands National Park (BUNP) and Palić Nature Park (PNP) have significant tourism potential for the development of specific tourism forms. These lake destinations offer not just natural features but also a developed infrastructure and a variety of events that are important to the ethno-social values of the local population. In this paper, the sociocultural and economic aspects of these locations are studied. Researching these two dimensions of sustainable tourism development (STuD) is important for tourism planning, growth, and control of STuD. This article’s research focuses on socio-cultural and economic elements that are critical to the growth of tourism (ToD). They are analyzed through revenue, employment, visitor spending, cultural and culinary marketing, events, and other aspects of this eco-sensitive tourist attraction. The study’s noteworthy findings demonstrate the importance of economic and socio-cultural elements for ToD and their substantial influence on the institutional and environmental aspects of sustainability. The quantitative method involved surveying visitors to these two protected areas. A total of 810 visitors participated in this research. Respondents expressed the importance of these two sustainability groups. Also, the results of the research indicate that economic and socio-cultural factors influence the respondents’ satisfaction to a significant extent. The research findings may be significant in the creation of plans for the growth of tourism. Full article
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