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The symbol of Lisbon , romanticism aside, is the tuk-tuk. There are those with tigers on the roof, with plastic floral decoration, painted bubblegum pink, or disguised as a streetcar: any element that helps to stand out among the tide of tricycles ready to show thousands of tourists the five, 10, 15 or 20 things they should not miss in the Portuguese capital.
The streetcar dominates on postcards and magnets, but the tuk-tuk has taken over the streets. The streetcars are rigid transports, incapable of deviating a millimeter from their route, while the tuk-tuks go at a brisk pace, often flouting traffic regulations to facilitate a good photograph and giving their passengers that frivolous, holiday-like feeling that they are in a carefree republic where everyone does what he or she wants.
And so, without realizing it, Lisbon has joined the club of charismatic cities that now only make visitors happy. The cool Lisbon of hanging clothes, tiles, and colorful facades that last year was declared the best urban destination in Europe at the World Travel Awards.
If the pace of the expulsion of locals does not stop, in a few years tourists will only be able to see each other when they climb the Alfama. Gentrification by leaps and bounds. Amid the euro crisis, while the country was under intervention, the conservative government passed a law that allowed the updating of old rents and led to multiple evictions. In parallel, the entry of foreign capital was encouraged through aggressive tax policies retirees from other countries moving to Portugal would not pay taxes until , and the creation of golden visas, which provided legal residency to non-EU citizens in exchange for real estate investments.
The Chinese became the most enthusiastic property owners in Lisbon. There was one good thing: the face of the city was rehabilitated and beautified. And a very bad thing: a massive exodus of Portuguese to the periphery. Such was the impact of the so-called Cristas law, which liberalized rents without much consideration, that the board ended up developing the Faces of Evictions campaign, in which evicted residents told their story.