BANGKOK 鈥 Bangkok tourist destination Khao San Road is usually heaving with people on weekends, its cheap beer bars, tattoo parlors, street vendors, hostels, and buzzing nightlife drawing budget travelers and tour group alike.

On a recent Saturday evening, the street was deserted except for a few dozen locals who wandered past boarded up shops, ignoring restaurant staff calling out meal and drink deals.

Khao San Road clearly shows the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on Bangkok, the world鈥檚 most visited city for four consecutive years before a ban on international travel.

鈥淚 have never seen it like this. Usually, we don鈥檛 have time to stand for even a minute,鈥 said a waitress who goes by the name Pookie.

鈥淟ots of businesses have shut here, and if we don鈥檛 see foreign tourists coming back soon, we may also shut. There are some locals coming on the weekends, but that鈥檚 not enough to keep us all going,鈥 she said, pointing to the empty tables.

After a record 39.8 million foreign visitors last year whose spending accounted to 11.4% of gross domestic product, Thailand had looked to welcome more than 40 million tourists this year.

But with flight bans and quarantines, the central bank expects only 8 million visitors this year.

The effect is keenly felt in Bangkok, where most tourists spend a night or two before heading to sandy beaches and hilltop Buddhist temples, with questions over whether the city should ditch the mass tourism model it has come to rely on.

It is a question many cities are grappling with, as the future of urban tourism is 鈥渄eeply uncertain鈥 in the short to medium term, said Tony Matthews, a senior lecturer in urban and environmental planning at Australia鈥檚 Griffith University.

鈥淐ities that rely heavily on tourism are facing an extraordinary crisis. Do they wait it out until mass tourism is viable again, or do they start developing major new industries and economies?鈥 he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

鈥淏ut you can鈥檛 easily retool an urban economy, and moving away from a tourism-dependent economic model is not easy unless there is something else ready to take over that鈥檚 at least as beneficial.鈥

QUALITY OVER QUANTITY

With cheap air travel fueling a boom in tourism in recent years, cities from Amsterdam to Sydney have struggled to balance the needs of local residents with the demands of visitors who boost the hospitality industry but can also cause damage.

Overcrowding can frustrate local residents, drive up rents, and put pressure on infrastructure including public transit and waste management, while also damaging the ecology and cultural and heritage assets, according to McKinsey Consulting.

With restrictions brought on by the coronavirus, some cities are changing their tourism-focused strategy.

Authorities in Barcelona said they would put 鈥渜uality over quantity,鈥 promoting local food and drawing more high spenders.

In Amsterdam, authorities said they would develop a so-called 鈥渄oughnut鈥 model that prioritizes social and ecological goals for better living, including decent housing, healthcare, as well as climate action and biodiversity.

鈥淲ith less future income from tourists, it makes sense for Amsterdam to try to improve its economic fundamentals in other ways,鈥 said Mr. Matthews.

鈥淏ut cities build up tourism profiles and associated economies over time. They come to depend on these and will not want to change approach unless they have to.鈥

Thailand has shut some of its most popular beaches in recent years to allow fragile coral reefs to recover from pollution caused by tourism, and removed vendors from Khao San Road and other areas to appeal more to tourists.

There have also been efforts to discard Thailand鈥檚 seedy reputation, and the go-go-bars and soapy massage parlors that Bangkok and some beach towns are notorious for.

Now, authorities have the opportunity to move towards a more sustainable model, said David Robinson, a tourism expert who has long criticized authorities鈥 drive for quantity over quality.

鈥淭he race to the top of the 鈥榤ost visited鈥 chart does not benefit the country,鈥 said Mr. Robinson, director of Bangkok River Partners, a network of riverside businesses that boost culture and heritage.

鈥淢ore is just more, not better, and certainly not more financially beneficial to the country. It鈥檚 unsustainable.鈥

NEW SCENARIO

Thailand has fared well in containing the coronavirus, with some 3,300 cases and fewer than 60 deaths recorded.

Yet plans for a 鈥渢ravel bubble鈥 agreement with select countries that would have allowed movement without the need for travelers to undergo quarantine have been shelved amid new outbreaks in East Asia, officials said.

Thailand has said it will allow a limited number of business travelers and medical tourists into the country, while also encouraging domestic tourism with stimulus measures worth more than $700 million to defray costs of hotels and flights.

Domestic tourism made up about 30% of the total market, and had not received much attention before, said Tanes Petsuwan, a deputy governor of marketing at the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT).

鈥淭his is the worst ever crisis for the tourism industry; the tsunami, SARS, MERS, bird flu, political upheaval鈥攏one of it was as bad as COVID. It has changed everything,鈥 he said.

鈥淭ourism will not be the same again: the line of coaches outside the Grand Palace or Chatuchak market, guides leading big tour groups around major attractions鈥攚e will not see that again, so we are preparing for a new scenario.鈥

While the meetings and conferences market has shrunk, there is demand for eco-tourism and wellness and medical vacations, said Michael Marshall, chief commercial officer of the Minor Hotels Group, which operates more than 500 hotels.

鈥淟uxury travel is an opportunity, but the domestic market will only keep us going to a certain extent,鈥 he said.

Authorities also cannot simply 鈥渢urn off the tap鈥 on the sex industry without a strategy and a transitional plan to develop cultural tourism, said Robinson.

鈥淚鈥檓 encouraged to see the number of people during COVID-19 getting to know their city again,鈥 he said.

Rose Duangkamol and her friend who were eating fried noodles on Khao San Road were doing just that.

鈥淲e used to come here maybe once a month before, but now we come more often,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 nice when it isn鈥檛 so crowded.鈥 鈥 Thomson Reuters Foundation