The dynamic charts illustrate the percentage of visitors choosing four kinds of different accommodation between 1988 and 2008.
Overall, rented apartment and hotels were more popular than by holimakers over the period, whereas staying with family and camping saw a reverse trend. Notably, staying with family remained the highest number of visitors throughout.
Visitors choosing stay with relatives and camping showed a downward change. The percentage of visitors living with their relatives increased slightly from 54 to 52% in the first decade, before recovering to a lower of 44% in 2008 and maintained the most popular types of accommodation over the surveyed period. Moreover, after camping documented with 26% 0f visitors using in the beginning, it experienced a twice-times pluge to 1% of visitors, prior to a slower decline to 12% of those in the end. Subsequently, it also became the least attractive kinds of accomodation with visitors.
In contrast, booking hotels and apartments were more favored. In 1988, 15% of visitors used hotels, yet the figure rose gradually to 22% in the next decade and unchanged among travellers in 2008. Lastly, apartments booked by holidaymakers declined steadily from 7 to 11% in the first ten years, then surged to a larger extent to 22% of those by 2008, making it the second most popular with hotels.
