The bar chart illustrates how many people visited places for tourists in a European city in 1981, 1991 and 2001. Overall, the number of visitors of National Park and National Gallery increased over the given period. Although, others showed different fluctuations in their data, but records of Central Amusement Park and Science Park slightly decreased at the end of the period, whereas Central Zoo’s number of visitors returned to its starting level.
The National Gallery was the only place that demonstrated a strong upward trend throughout the period. As a result of its rapid growth, it overtook a National Park, almost doubling their records (around 15 million) in 1991, and became the second most popular place by 2001 with 20 million visitors. In addition, National Park also followed the same trend and increased by around three-quarters, reaching 15 million in 2001.
The Central Amusement Park was the most dominant area in popularity among the tourists across the given period, despite the fluctuation as a result of which figures decreased compared to initial values by almost 2.5 million achieving 22.5 million in 2001. Moreover, the same trend experienced records of Science Park, where the number of guests fall from almost 7 million in 1981 to around 6 million in 2001.
The only place that remained the same between 1981 and 2001 was Central Zoo which falled to around 1 million in 1991 before grew back to approximately 2 millions in 2001.
