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Estepona Adds 144 Smart CCTV

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Estepona local police CCTV control room. Credit: Ayuntamiento de Estepona.

Local authorities in Estepona have unveiled plans to expand video surveillance across streets to better traffic flow and road safety, as well as general crime reduction. Eventually, the massive network will reach 327 devices.

Council workers in Estepona first placed 110 units of CCTV throughout the town in 2023. They then later added 73 more in various residential areas through different partnership agreements with local neighbours’ associations. Plans now call for another 144 extra intelligent devices that bring the total to 327 cameras across Estepona.

Residents will now get an extra feeling of safety as denser coverage with one of the new cameras available for every 243 people in the town.

New units strengthen traffic monitoring

Future equipment will integrate directly into the existing visualisation and control platform managed by local police. Operators can gain real-time connections for viewing, recording and storing images plus video footage on a central server located in council facilities. Access points operate from the local police headquarters.

Safety deputy highlights key benefits

Ana Velasco, deputy mayor responsible for security matters, notes how current arrangements deliver clear advantages for traffic management. Extension efforts target wider coverage in multiple parts of the whole area.

Advanced features in incoming devices will deliver greater capacity and improved performance levels. Operators achieve faster responses to congestion or collisions while applying modern tools for smoother vehicle movement.

Speed checks to form part of expansion

Contract documents include provisions for a dedicated speed monitoring location. Drivers face encouragement to adjust habits through better overall movement plus better lane discipline. Measures also support lower vehicle emissions in the area.

All installations follow strict national security guidelines known as ENS. Data handling meets full requirements under current safety and privacy laws.

Public reaction

The general mood towards these heightened measures for extra security is overall positive. Marco, a local Estepona businessman, explained, “While life in Estepona has always been reasonably safe and law-abiding, there is a feeling that crime and anti-social behaviour could begin to spill over from neighbouring towns. It’s something that often comes up in conversation. So, no one really minds all that much if there are extra eyes on us.”

Estepona continues building on its early adoption of smart technology for urban control that led the province. Local police coordinate operations while other security services receive support when situations demand it.

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Council Listens To Residents In Torre Del Mar

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Mobile Antennas in Torre del Mar. Credit: Ernest Rose – Shutterstock

Residents across Torre del Mar have received welcome news after their council backed a series of practical measures during the June plenary session. Cross-party support delivered clear responses to community feedback on health, services, safety and daily connections. Leaders showed they take resident concerns seriously by acting together on several fronts.

Responding to health worries over mobile phone tower

Neighbours have been voicing worries for several years about the telecom installation in Calle Medico Ros Alferez. Council members voted unanimously to remove the eyesore after long-standing complaints linked it to local health issues. Past work already prevented three new mobile phone masts during the current term, with one taken down after legal action. Officials now seek extra powers from central government to manage licences and require health safety checks on existing sites. A study will explore moving similar equipment out of populated areas while protecting service quality.

Advancing safety and community information

Further unanimous votes backed permanent information campaigns on council rules to help people understand local expectations and encourage good relations, especially among younger residents, tourists and motorhome users. Another measure supports video surveillance systems in schools, care homes, day centres and other public support sites to protect those most at risk.

Addressing calls for safer neighbourhood ties

Residents from Ensanche Oeste, working through the local pressure group AVEOtorre, talked of the need for better pedestrian access to the promenade after the original route was removed. Their demonstration renewed requests for paving, progress on the roundabout and completion of Vial-7. Council leaders had already pledged to prioritise accessibility improvements, and current projects continue to deliver safer connections for the growing community of over 1,300 homes.

These unanimous outcomes demonstrate a council ready to engage with feedback and deliver results on health, services and quality of life in Torre del Mar and the wider area. Either that, or they wanted the proposals out of the way so they could quickly go on their summer holidays. In any case, progress has unanimously been made. Further work will build on this advancement for the benefit of local people.

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Mijas Gymnastics Club End Of Season Gala

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Club Polideportivo Mijas Gymnastics club brought its season to a close with stunning performances in an emotional gala at the Polideportivo de Osunillas, Mijas Pueblo, an afternoon of flowers, tears, warm applause from start to finish.

A full colourful season of talent and progress on display

Gymnasts from every category performed their individual and collective routines, with families and supporters cheering from the stands. These snippets of music and choreography gave loved ones a chance to appreciate how far each athlete had come over the course of the year. From the youngest girls in their little tutus representing Mijas, La Cala de Mijas, and Las Cañadas, to the competitive and pre-competitive gymnasts, wowing with their creativity and talent, every routine was met with enthusiastic appreciation from a packed (very hot) venue. Diplomas and gifts were presented to all participants, with organisers and coaches also receiving recognition for their contributions throughout the season.

Mijas gymnastics show
Stunning performances on display
Credit: CP Mijas Gimnasia Ritmica

Heartfelt farewells for Carla and Tania

Moving moments came with the formal send-offs for Carla Zaragoza and Tania Sanchez, both stepping back from competition. One due to head off for university studies, and the other for personal reasons. A specially produced video montage traced their journeys from young girls taking their first steps in rhythmic gymnastics to accomplished club members, drawing tears from teammates, coaches, and families across the room.

Mijas Rhythmic Gymnastics Club

The popular local club hold classes for a wide variety of ages across Mijas, La Cala de Mijas, and Las Cañadas. With a new generation of young gymnasts progressing through the ranks, the club enters next competition season with genuine optimism for further wins and successes in the sport.

For more information on the club, their competitions and galas, you can visit the Mijas Town Hall website or CP Mijas Gimnasia Ritmica social media channels.

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Costa Del Sol Brings In New Restrictions On Short-Term Rentals

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Off looking for the AirBnB. Credit: Sacha Woodward

Council leaders have just approved changes to the Malaga City plan that stop automatic approval for new hotels, hostels, tourist apartments and short-term rentals on residential land. Any new project in these zones now needs a full planning modification, which must prove broad public benefit in general and ask specifically to that neighbourhood. Requests submitted after the rule appears in legal text face suspension for up to three years.

However, earlier applications keep moving forward unaffected. This latest step builds on earlier limits introduced since 2024. Officials hope to return more homes to local residents while trying to balance tourism as the area’s main economic driver.

Current scale of tourist rentals in Malaga

Official regional records show over twelve thousand registered short-term tourist properties in Malaga’s capital alone. These offer around sixty-four thousand beds. Separate estimates from national statistics place the figure lower, around eight thousand properties with capacity for thirty-four thousand places. There is no shortage of interest in the Costa del Sol for holidaying, but balance is called for, especially with a housing crisis on the horizon.

The city centre and areas near Plaza de la Merced show the highest concentration. Some streets have turned over 80 per cent of homes to tourist use. Pressure has also grown in neighbourhoods such as Pedregalejo, El Palo, La Malagueta and Huelin.

Step-by-step tightening of rules

Restrictions arrived gradually at first. First came rules requiring independent access and services for new tourist homes inside apartment blocks.

In August 2025 a three-year pause stopped new registrations in forty-three saturated neighbourhoods where tourist homes already exceeded eight per cent of housing stock. Exceptions allowed some projects that were already under way and full tourist apartment buildings to continue.

The new plan closes those gaps by treating all forms of tourist accommodation the same on residential land, even hotels.

Shop units face tighter conversion rules

The same reforms limit changes from shops into flats to rent on main streets and squares. Remaining conversions must meet stricter standards for light, ventilation and size when being considered for tourist rental.

Council members say these steps will help keep local businesses active and protect the housing supply for residents. Opposition groups and neighbourhood associations argue even more limits and more affordable housing construction are still needed. But, for now, the council has remained conservative.

Licence rules across the Costa del Sol

Elsewhere on the coast, Marbella and most other towns continue to accept new short-term rental applications. Two areas, Malaga capital and Manilva, operate three-year pauses on new licences. Mijas has applied extra conditions.

Licences remain tied to the property rather than the owner. Buyers of registered homes can usually continue rental operations after a simple ownership update with the regional tourism register.

National changes simplify compliance

A nationwide registration system for short-term rentals ended in May 2026 after a Supreme Court ruling. Regional VFT licences in Andalucia now serve as the main requirement.

Operators must provide information such as emergency procedures, maintain proper insurance and follow guest registration duties. Fines for unlicensed activity can reach high levels in serious cases.

Marbella is maintaining oversight without a blanket cap on licences, and so seemingly more relaxed than some of its neighbouring towns. New applications are still possible provided neighbourhood association and council conditions are met.

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