Munich will open its first-ever non-alcoholic Oktoberfest beer garden in an attempt to curb reckless binge drinking and crime in the city centre.
Die Null (The Zero) will serve exclusively alcohol-free beverages to transform the Karl-Stützel-Platz area which has long had a reputation for drugs, crime and overall neglect.
Restauranteurs at nearby bars, hotels, and restaurants, expressed contempt in a recent Zeit Magazin interview over raucous locals and tourists plundering out of trains to drink to excess and immerse themselves in Munich’s acclaimed status as a “beer haven.”
Munich’s city administration expressed the aim for a transformation in the area with hopes of the new alcohol-free rebranding of the area seeing it “anchored in the centre of society”.
Local restauranteur Florian Schönhofer said: “It is no longer fun, it is pretty disgusting.
“We don’t want to drive anyone away, but we want to reclaim public space.
“The real problem lies in a certain lack of boundaries in alcohol consumption, which 20 years ago was much more restricted to designated places.”
Yet, he admitted that losses were expected as a result of the changes.
For over 500 years, Bavaria has had a fixed “purity law” (Reinheitsgebot) which restricts the beer recipe to only a handful of ingredients: barley, hops and water.
This law, however, will only impact the establishments if they seek to brew their own alcohol-free beer.
Moreover, alcohol consumption has dropped considerably in Germany with more people opting for health-conscious choices such as alcohol-free beer.
As of this year, data published by Statista highlighted that consumption per capita in Germany was down by 14.5 per cent meaning the average consumption per person dropped from 107.3 litres to 91.8 litres in the last ten years.
Comparatively, close to 50 per cent of UK adults reportedly drank alcohol at least once a week, according to Drinkaware findings from 2022.
Though that figure has dropped from the previous 54 of weekly drinkers in 2011, evidence still shows that alcohol-related deaths were the highest on record according to the latest data from the ONS.
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