Amsterdam and Science Fiction ArchivesSydney are polar opposites when it comes to nightlife.
While the Dutch capital contains numerous clubs with 24-hour licenses, Australia's largest city has operated strict lockout laws since 2014.
Patrons are forbidden from entering licensed venues located in Sydney's city centre after 1:30 a.m., and alcohol service is cut at 3 a.m. on the dot, due to concerns about alcohol-fuelled violence.
It's a measure which "doesn't make sense" to Amsterdam's Night Mayor, Mirik Milan, who spoke to the ABC.
"I think [lockout laws] will not work because, probably, what the State Government wants is behavioural change, and you don't get behavioural change from blaming it on the operators," he told the news outlet.
"I think a modern day nightclub should have multiple uses, it's not about dancing 24 hours a day."
"I think behavioural change comes from bottom-up initiatives, investing in your community and trying to change their behaviour from within."
The Night Mayor of Amsterdam is an independent non-for-profit foundation, a liaison which bridges the gap between business owners, residents and governments. Milan has led the organization since 2012 and was active in pushing for 24-hour licenses for certain venues.
The licenses have been awarded to venues that have "multi-disciplinary" aspects that serve the local community. For example, one 24-hour license holder, De School, is a gym, gallery and restaurant, while also operating as a nightclub.
"I think a modern day nightclub should have multiple uses, it's not about dancing 24 hours a day," he said.
Part of the argument for these long operating hours is the ease in dispersing crowds.
"When the venues close, they all close at the same time. So they have to push the people on to the street all at the same time. When you push 1000 people on to the street at 4 a.m., this of course causes a lot of noise for neighbours, because of course it's not controllable," he said.
"So widening the hours, [it's about] making sure people can decide for themselves on when they want to leave ... also the clubs are really important in taking care of their surrounding area, and not just to their doorstep."
Recently, a review into Sydney's lockout laws recommended the relaxation of last entry and alcohol cessation times by 30 minutes. The laws have received strong support from health professionals and politicians, but have been derided by musicians and young people.
Athlete's daredevil wheelchair stunt officially opens the 2016 Paralympic GamesDeadly Louisiana deluge had a major climate change assist, study findsArtist and mom of twins harmoniously pairs working and breastfeedingApple's AirPods are either genius or a complete disasterApple kills 16GB smartphone with iPhone 7, now starts at 32GBAmazon finally brings Alexa to the Fire tabletMario is finally coming to mobile in 'Super Mario Run'Apple introduces 'swimApple's new Twitter account leaked iPhone details6 ways you can help support the right to literacy around the worldOpen water nears North Pole as 2016 melt season races to finishDehydration is on trend, according to Kanye West's latest fashion showDehydration is on trend, according to Kanye West's latest fashion showEverything Apple's new AirPods look likeLove him or hate him, Tim Tebow is back. But this time he's playing baseball.The iPhone now comes in black, and an even blacker blackAirbnb threatens legal action in New YorkWhat your childhood school lunch said about youMissed the Apple event? You can watch the entire keynote video online.Why does Apple hate wires so much? Here's one wild guess. Latest Apple rumor takes the 11 out of the 'iPhone Pro' Everything we didn't see at Apple's big event Eating at Disneyland's newest restaurant costs as much as your rent All the trailers from Disney+ Ronda Rousey stands in solidarity with Standing Rock by delivering supplies Slack releases dark mode for desktop and yes, please No, Fox News didn't get Trump to flash the White House lights on and off Nobody knows why this woman trolled a reporter with an M&M's hat Lyft adds 911 button more than a year after Uber app Artificial intelligence could one day diagnose skin cancer from smartphones Android phones already have all the new iPhone 11 features How Facebook will pick the news you see in its app We maxed out the new Apple Watch Series 5, and it costs a fortune Little maestro expertly commands the band in an Istanbul subway iPhone 11 discounts from Verizon, AT&T, and other mobile carriers This kitten took his love for peanut butter to a whole new level Now any idiot off the street can answer your dumb Alexa questions Hacking firm Cellebrite's newest agreement is with ICE Teenage innovators are improving the bathroom selfie, one random object at a time Aura readers' advice on how to pick your new iPhone color
2.8866s , 10137.4453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Science Fiction Archives】,Information Information Network