Europe hotel rates down 12%

Paris in the springtime? Beach time in Barcelona? These trips might not be as expensive as you think. According to a new report from hotel price comparison site trivago, Europe hotel prices are 12 percent less than in January 2009. Read: get your passports and hop across the pond!

Among the findings:

  • Dublin, Ireland: The average price of a standard double room is 84 pounds (approximately $136) in January 2010, 42 percent less than last year.
  • United Kingdom: Average hotel prices are 91 pounds (approximately $148), two percent less than the previous month.
  • Wales: The UK city offers the cheapest hotel rates at 78 pounds (approximately $127), followed by Northern Ireland (85 pounds) and Scotland (87 pounds).
  • Milan: The current price for a standard double room is 105 pounds (approximately $170), 15 percent less than last year.
  • Barcelona: Low hotel rates average around 81 pounds (approximately $132), 20 percent less than January 2009
  • Lisbon: Hotel rates are down 18 percent from last year, around 72 pounds (approximately $117) for a standard room.
  • Vienna: A standard room rate is around 89 pounds (approximately $145), 11 percent below the average room rate last year.

Lisbon airport brings some Christmas joy – flashmob style!

Christmas time at the airport is usually a time of doom, gloom, pushing and waiting in line. Portuguese airline TAP and the Portuguese Airport Authority decided to spice things up at Lisbon airport with a massive dance and music show. Bonus points for spotting the dancing Santa.

Watch for yourself, and see the joy this brought to the passengers. How do you think this would go down at your local airport? Would the TSA have the happy people shot, or just tasered?

(Thanks Rita!)

Photo of the Day (7.12.09)

Lisbon’s Bairro Alto neighborhood has managed to become one of the city’s most popular and yet still remain among its quirkiest, home to a budding collection of eclectic shopping, raucous nightlife and interesting food. This shot, by Flickr user (flicts), offers a good approximation of what Bairro Alto is all about. The first-person reflection in the fisheye mirror lends us a surprisingly intimate look inside a local shop, making the viewer feel as though they were there, browsing right alongside the photographer.

Have any shots of your own you’d like to have considered as our Photo of the Day? Upload your best photos to our Gadling group on Flickr.

Portugal decriminalizes drugs; world doesn’t end

When most of us hear about “legal” drugs in Europe, we think of the Netherlands and its capital Amsterdam, where permissive drug policies and smoke-filled “coffee shops” attract tourists from around the world. (Even Rick Steves!)

What most people don’t know is that in 2001, Portugal became the first country in the world to decriminalize all drugs– including cocaine and heroin– in an experiment that’s now being hailed by many as a rousing success.

According to Salon‘s Glenn Greenwald, who is fluent in Portuguese and spent months in Portugal studying the effects of decriminalization, several things have happened since 2001:

  • Drug use among teens has declined
  • Rates of HIV infection from using dirty needles has been cut by 17%
  • Portugal has had the lowest rate in Europe of lifetime marijuana use for people over 15
  • Deaths resulting from heroin and similar “hard” drugs have been cut in half
  • Drug-related crime and violence has been down
  • There’s been a massive increase in the number of people seeking drug treatment
  • Rates of lifetime drug use among 7th to 9th graders went from 14.1% to 10.6%

Most importantly is what did not happen: There was no increase in overall drug use, and Portugal did not become a destination for drug-seeking tourists.

Greenwald writes: “The data show that, judged by virtually every metric, the Portuguese decriminalization framework has been a resounding success. Within this success lie self-evident lessons that should guide drug policy debates around the world.”

What do you think, Gadling faithful? Should the U.S. and other countries follow Portugal’s model and decriminalize or even legalize drugs?

Time favorably cites Greenwald’s study here.

Photo of the Day (07.06.08)

Flickr user wesleyrosenblum has decided to let us in on a secret – Lisbon is one of the most picturesque cities on earth. This photo looks like it was taken from atop the hill that’s occupied by Lisbon’s Castelo São Jorge, the magnificent castle that guards this ancient port city.

I like the way the cannon “pokes” out into the middle of this view, looming over the city below. I also like the way the field of view is split neatly in half, with little puffy clouds floating above and ancient terra-cotta-roofed buildings laying underneath.

Have any photos of a panoramic view in Portugal? Or maybe just a picturesque shot from Portland, Oregon? Add it to our Gadling photo pool on Flickr and it could end up as our Photo of the Day.