City launches temporary drug consumption center to address increasing public drug use, offering services to non-resident addicts for the first time.

"We are hoping for lasting relief for those affected, public spaces and the population."
"For non-resident addicts, there is no alternative to consumption of drugs in public spaces resulting in police evictions."
In an unprecedented move to combat the escalating drug crisis, the City of Zurich is tearing down its bureaucratic walls. On October 1, a pioneering 'Room for Consumption and Sorting' will swing its doors open on Bederstrasse, marking the first time the city has officially extended critical harm-reduction services to non-resident addicts. This is a decisive break from established protocol, where drop-in centers have historically been the exclusive domain of registered locals.
The city is confronting a stark reality: police evictions are failing. Without access to safe facilities, addicts from outside Zurich have been forced into a cycle of public consumption and law enforcement removal that solves nothing. By launching this temporary facility, Zurich is acknowledging that the administrative status of an addict does not mitigate the public health risk they pose on the streets. This critical intervention aims to pull consumption out of the public eye and into a controlled, clinical environment immediately.
District 4 is buckling under the pressure of a relentless surge in public drug use. Throughout the summer, the situation has deteriorated significantly, with the notorious hotspot at Bäckeranlage overflowing and spilling deep into the surrounding residential neighborhoods. This is not a contained issue; it is an expanding crisis that has forced city officials to act with urgency.
The visibility of the crisis has reached a tipping point. Residents and local businesses are grappling with the fallout of open consumption, as the lack of alternatives for non-residents has turned public parks into de facto injection sites. The city's admission is blunt: for those without a Zurich address, there is simply "no alternative" to using in public. This new facility is a direct response to a summer that saw the problem metastasize from a localized nuisance into a district-wide emergency.
This is not just a shelter; it is a tactical triage center. The Bederstrasse facility is explicitly designated as a "Room for Consumption and Sorting," a title that underscores its dual operational mandate. The objective is clear and aggressive: provide an immediate, safe retreat for consumption to clear the streets, but then pivot instantly to repatriation.
The city is not offering a permanent home for out-of-town addicts. Instead, the facility will serve as a logistical hub to stabilize individuals before referring them back to their communities of origin. This "treat and transfer" model represents a pragmatic approach to social policy. It offers dignity and safety in the short term while enforcing the expectation that other municipalities must eventually shoulder the burden of their own residents. It is a stop-gap measure designed to stop the bleeding while long-term repatriation plans are put into motion.
The stakes for Zurich's social policy leaders are incredibly high. Raphael Golta, the Social Democrat Head of Social Affairs, has pinned his strategy on the hope for "lasting relief"ânot just for the addicts, but for the beleaguered public spaces and the population of Zurich. This initiative is a balancing act between compassion and public order, attempting to reclaim the city's parks without criminalizing the most vulnerable.
As October 1 approaches, all eyes are on the Bederstrasse experiment. If successful, it could serve as a blueprint for how major Swiss cities manage the transient drug population. If it fails, District 4 risks further entrenchment of its open-air drug scene. The city has played its hand: a temporary, targeted facility designed to break the cycle of eviction and return. Now, the results must follow.