I do get where
@Tibble is coming from.
I know that Alton Towers will always market their new additions, but more minor ones haven’t typically had this kind of marketing. Galactica literally just had a small banner outside prior to the off-season. The CBeebies additions weren’t really marketed much at all prior to the off-season. The Alton Towers Dungeon was marketed a little, but not this much. The World of David Walliams had a little marketing, but again, not loads.
Going back further, the HH’s revamp into Duel literally just had a small banner outside advertising that blasters were coming in 2003.
This is being quite heavily marketed for a non-major addition, which does suggest to me that this could be a bigger change than some are letting on.
I’d say that this speaks more volumes about Alton Towers’ typical reticence in announcing closures than anything to do with the scale of refurbishment.
For a comparable dark ride refurb in the past; Toyland Tours never had a formal closure announcement, and that ride was borderline unrecognisable by the time it reopened as Charlie and the Chocolate Factory in 2006.
In fact, I’m struggling to think of a non-coaster attraction that has actually had a closure announcement within the last 20 years or so. Certainly within Merlin’s tenure, anyway; the only prior closure announcements I can think of at Alton Towers during Merlin’s tenure are Corkscrew and Nemesis V1. None of the removed flat rides had announced closures, CATCF didn’t have an announced closure, and even The Flume didn’t have an announced closure (they announced it was closing “for the season” on 10th October 2015, but this implied that the ride was reopening in 2016, so I’m hesitant to call it a closure announcement).
I think Alton in general are just very, very reticent when it comes to announcing the closures of rides that aren’t roller coasters. With that in mind, I don’t think that the lack of an official Duel closure announcement was a sign that it’s not changing much by any means. In general, Alton don’t tend to announce the closures of rides that aren’t major thrill coasters, so in hindsight, I’d almost say that we were quite lucky to get the chalkboard hint! Therefore, I’d argue that history suggests that Alton’s attitude to announcing its closure would have been the same regardless of the scale of refurbishment/retheme occurring.
I’d argue that a bigger sign that we could be seeing larger change is the fact that it closed in September rather than at the end of the season. If the ride were only having a minor refurbishment with most of the HH theming remaining, surely it could have just closed at the end of the season and had the refurbishment be announced in a low-key way on the approach to March?