Building a new theme park can be a risky venture. It’s hard to imagine a more spectacular failure than Euro Disneyland, which came close to bankruptcy after its disastrous opening in 1992. And, of course, there was the debut of Universal Studios Florida in 1990, when all of three of its headline attractions were out of action for months.
Those two parks, though, did eventually recover. So too did Disney’s California Adventure and Hong Kong Disneyland, both of which suffered a troubled start to their existence. But some theme parks have crashed and burned so badly, and so quickly, that they never again opened their gates.
Let’s take a look at 10 great examples of what NOT to do when constructing a new theme park.
10. Magic Mountain (Denver, Colorado, USA)
Many entrepreneurs looked on enviously as Disneyland opened in 1955. One of those looking to enter the theme park business was Walter Francis Cobb, who had already created several roadside attractions in the Denver area. In 1957, he teamed up with John Calvin Sutton to form Magic Mountain, Inc. and announced plans to build the first full-scale theme park to be constructed by a company other than Disney. He hired a host of former Disneyland employees, including the man that led its construction, C.V. Wood.
Magic Mountain was to occupy a sprawling 600-acre site at the foot of the mountains at Apex Gulch. The park was to celebrate the past, present and future of Colorado, and its design was strikingly similar to that of Disneyland. A narrow-gauge railway would circle the park, which would feature lands including Centennial City (similar to Frontierland), Storybook Lane (similar to Fantasyland) and Magic of Industry (similar to Tomorrowland).
From 1957-59, a host of attractions were built, including the railroad and a Main Street, USA-style area. Almost immediately, though, financial problems surfaced, and the plans were scaled back – with Magic of Industry and Storybook Lane being dropped altogether. An artificial ski slope was installed and proved to be successful, but the theme park was shuttered in 1960. Many of its rides were sold off to Six Flags Over Texas, a regional theme park with more modest ambitions.
Image: Xnatedawgx, Wikipedia
Eventually, in 1970, Magic Mountain was resurrected as Heritage Square, a themed shopping village that is free to enter. It is still operating today, although some areas are left as abandoned reminders of its past.
9. Britannia Park (Derbyshire, UK)
The success of Alton Towers in the 1980s created a new industry for theme parks in the UK, and competitors were determined to grab a slice of the piece. Among the first to try was KLF, a Kent-based company fronted by chairman and managing director Peter Kellard. The firm signed a deal with Derbyshire County Council to redevelop a 350-acre former opencast mining site into a major theme park that would celebrate Britain’s past, present and future. The initial plan was for Britannia Park to open in 1982, and Kellard confidently predicted that it would surpass the Tower of London as the UK’s most popular tourist attraciton, pulling in more more than 5 million visitors per year.
After a lengthy legal battle with local residents who opposed the project, construction started more than three years behind schedule. The park’s opening day was eventually scheduled for June 27, 1985. “Rule Britannia, Britannia Park is great” was the catchy jingle that accompanied the park’s advertising. Heavyweight boxer Henry Cooper was on hand to open the park, while a Concorde performed a flypast. Kellard promised that guests would “see a whole representation of the country in one day”. For this privilege, adults would pay £3, and children £1.50.
Unfortunately, the park was far from finished. The entrance area was in place, along with five Epcot-style pavilions in the British Genius area and a miniature railway line. Much of the rest of the site hadn’t even been landscaped by this point, and resembled a construction site. Visitors were not imopressed, and the park shut its gates after just 12 weeks of operation at the end of November 1985.
With no private sector rescuer stepping up, Derbyshire County Council was forced to buy back the park for £2.5 million with the aid of a bank loan. It would eventually reopen two years later as the American Adventure. The Fraud Squad subsequently launched an investigation into the running of the park, resulting in one of the longest criminal trials in UK history. Kellard was eventually sentenced to four years in prison for his part in the fraud (he served just one, for health reasons), with the chairman of Britannia Park, John Wright, receiving a six-month sentence.
8. Pirates World (Dania, Florida, USA)
While Walt Disney was considering building a second theme park on the east coast, he held discussions with the Recreation Corporation of America. RCA, though, balked at the cost – and Disney ultimately went it alone with Walt Disney World. RCA continued to look for a way into the theme park market, however, and developed its own park in Florida. The 100-acre Pirates World opened in 1967 in Dania – meaning that it actually opened some four years before the Magic Kingdom.
Pirates World’s attractions included The Crows Nest, an observation tower that had originally been the Belgian Aerial Tower at the 1964/65 New York World’s Fair. Another highlight was the Pirate Ship, which cruised along a “river”, coming under fire from enemy pirates. Elsewhere, a wild mouse-style roller coaster, a log flume (also acquired from the World’s Fair) and various midway-style rides rounded out the line-up.
Due to the RCA connection, several major bands (including Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath) were attracted to perform concerts at Pirates World. It performed well initially, but the folly of RCA’s decision not to collaborate with Disney soon became clear. The park struggled after the 1971 debut of the Magic Kingdom, and was forced into bankruptcy by 1973. It was eventually developed into housing.
7. Celebration City (Branson, Missouri, USA)
Herschend Family Entertainment has a great track record in the American amusement industry, running successful parks such as Dollywood and Silver Dollar City. It’s fair to say, though, that Celebration City was not one of its most successful ventures.
Conceived as a “night-time theme park” to complement Silver Dollar City, the park was built on the site of the former Branson USA amusement park, which itself had surived for only two years after opening in 1999. At a cost of around $40 million, it was given a new theme, based around America in the early 20th century. The idea was that guests from the 19th century-themed Silver Dollar City could continue their day at the second park, which would operate from the late afternoon into the evening, capping the day with a laser and fireworks display.
Celebration City threw open its gates in 2003, complete with a $4 million wooden roller coaster dubbed the Ozark Wildcat. It failed to meet financial expectations, however, and closed in October 2008. Although Herschend has explored options to revive it, it remains shuttered – its headline roller coaster still standing as a reminder of its failure.
6. Crinkley Bottom (Lancashire, UK)
At the height of his fame in the late 1990s, Mr Blobby attracted almost 17 million viewers to the BBC’s Noel’s House Party television show, hosted by Noel Edmonds. The large, pink character caused chaos wherever he went, and although many adults despised him, he proved to be a huge hit with younger viewers.
Mr Blobby’s popularity led to the opening of two theme parks dedicated to the character. The first, in Lancashire, closed down just three months after opening in 1994, resulting in a £2.5 million loss for the local council – which, of course, was funded by taxpayers. The council attempted to sue Noel Edmond’s company, Unique, for a breach of contract, but eventually ending up paying out £950,000 itself to the firm in an out-of-court settlement.
The final report into the fiasco saw district auditor Clive Portman accuse the council of failing to protect taxpayer’s interests, having taken on the entire financial risk for the project.
The second Mr Blobby theme park, in Somerset, lasted a little longer, closing in 1999 after Noel’s House Party was finally cancelled by the BBC. Some of its attractions were left in place after it was abandoned.
5. Gulliver’s Kingdom (Kawaguchi-machi, Japan)
The Japanese government invested vast sums of stimulus money to create Gulliver’s Kingdom, a lilliputlian land in the shadow of Mount Fuji. In theory, it could have been successful – after all, around 25 million tourists visit the region every year. It was backed by a loan of $350 million from the Niigato Chuo Bank, allowing it to build some fairly spectacular-looking attractions such as a 147-foot statue of Lemuel Gulliver.
There weren’t many rides on offer when the park opened in 2007, other than a bobsled track and a luge course. And the statue itself was securely tied to the ground, rather than towering above guests. Perhaps unsurprisingly, Gulliver’s Kingdom proved to be a white elephant, creating construction jobs but generating little actual revenue.
Eventually, the Niigato Chuo Bank collapsed, and was instructed to clear its book of unprofitable assets. One of those was Gulliver’s Kingdom, which shut its doors in 2001. Perhaps this should be a warning to the new theme parks springing up all over China, many of them funded by similarly huge amounts of debt.
4. Splendid China (Citrus Ridge, Florida, USA)
Reported to have cost $100 million to build, Splendid China was designed as a sister park to Splendid China in Shenzhen, China. It opened in 1993, and allowed guests to explore more than 60 replica landmarks, each recreated at one-tenth scale. Nearly seven million 1-inch-long bricks were used to create its Great Wall of China scene.
The park quickly came in for fierce criticism, mainly due its ownership by the Chinese government. Protesters were unhappy about the inclusion of the Potala Palace, which served as the home of successive Dalai Lamas in Tibet. Meanwhile, management were embarrassed when a number of performers shipped in from China “escaped” to seek political asylum in the US.
Opened in 1993, the park managed to struggle on for around a decade. After being pillaged by vandals and thieves, it was finally torn down in 2013.
3. Hard Rock Park / Freestyle Music Park (Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, USA)
Major new theme parks are built fairly rarely in the US these days, so there was plenty of excitement when, in early 2007, HRP Myrtle Beach Operations announced that it would build Hard Rock Park in Myrtle Beach. The company had licensed the Hard Rock name from the owners of the Hard Rock Cafe brand, and planned to install a host of music-themed attractions.
Built at a cost of $225 million, Hard Rock Park welcomed its first guests on June 2, 2008. It featured six “rock environs”, with names such as British Invasion and Born in the USA. The main attractions were roller coasters and live shows, all set to music, while a 10,000-seat amphitheater hosted live performances.
Unfortunately, the park had opened slap-bang in the middle of a major financial crisis. It was unable to secure funding for its planned advertising campaign, and visitor numbers were massively below projections. The park was unable to service its debts, ending its season a month early and filing for bankrupty protection.
In February 2009, the park was sold to FPI MB Entertainment for just $25 million. The Hard Rock Name was dropped, and all Hard Rock merchandise was destroyed. The newly-renamed Freestyle Music Park proved to be no more successful, despite reopening on May 23, 2009. Heavy discounting failed to boost attendance figures, and the owners were hit by a number of lawsuits. It shut once again at the end of the season. Many of the park’s rides are now up for sale, while sections of the property have been sold off.
2. The Battersea (London, UK)
John Broome, a millionaire property entrepreneur, turned Alton Towers into Britain’s first theme park in 1980. Flush with his success, he set his sights on creating a second major park elsewhere in the UK. Incredibly, he settled on building the park in and around Battersea Power Station, an iconic structure close to central London. If he could pull it off, the park would have a potential audience of millions of people within a short train ride from the site.
The Battersea, as the attraction was to be known, would boast a wide selection of rides, restaurants and shops spread across the building’s main gallery and two turbine halls. These would be connected by glass elevators, with a wall of water plunging down one side of the building. A balloon ride on the upper floor would be the main indoor attraction, while the area outside the power station would host a roller coaster and a rapids ride. Up to seven thousand visitors per hour were expected to arrive via a spectacular entrance colonnade.
Unfortunately, Broome wildly underestimated the cost of renovating the power station, which turned out to have no foundations and to contain tons of toxic asbestos. Work stopped after just four months, but not before the roof was removed, leaving the building’s interior exposed to the elements for years.
1. Freedomland U.S.A. (Bronx, New York, USA)
After Disneyland opened, Walt Disney was approached by several groups about the possibility of opening an east coast version of the park. One of the proposed sites was near New York, but Disney rejected it on the basis that it would not be able to operate year-round. Fresh from being fired by Disney, C.V. Wood had already played a big role in designing the doomed Magic Mountain. But he wouldn’t stop there – he also took up the challenge of creating a theme park in New York. He partnered with Milton T. Raynor, a television sports producer and attorney to build Freedomland U.S.A., perhaps the best known early Disneyland rival of all.
Freedomland would sit on the site of a former municipal landfill, with the park itself covering 85 acres. Hundreds of artists and architects were brought in, while Broadway composer Jule Styne wrote an original soundtrack for the park. A total of $65 million was invested, with the park featuring eight miles of navigable waterways and lakes, 10,000 trees, 18 dining outlets and parking for 72,000 cars.
The park was shaped like a giant map of the US, with areas dedicated to Old New York, Old Chicago, The Great Plains, San Francisco, The Old Southwest, New Orleans and Satellite City (inspired by Florida’s “Space Coast”). It boasted no fewer than four unique dark rides, each built by Arrow Development – a key partner of Disney.
Freedomland’s opening season was beset by problems. Less than a week after opening, a stagecoach overturned in the Great Plains section, causing ten injuries including a broken spine. Two months later, armed men made off with more than $28,000 from the park’s front office. By the end of 1961, the park was $8 million in debt. Competition from the 1964 New York World’s Fair was the final straw, with the park being declared bankrupt and subsequently being demolished.