I might have missed something but why is it instantly assumed that this will be a refurb? What if it's the case that the ride is making way for completely new developments?
Reading back over the last few months of discussion will show how things have progressed, but short answer is this all started from people having reliable sources of information saying that refurbishment was a possibility. That has then only been reinforced by the post on
Alton Towers Haunted House mentioning "The Duel is Over", the numbers as a reference to Emily Alton and finally the "This is my house" pretty much referring to the ride itself not going anywhere. Then of course John Burton from Merlin Magic Making tweeting:
That's what I mean. When I first went on Duel last year, I didn't think of "oh, wow this is shoddy", Instead I thought of "Oh wow, that's cool and quite characteristic"
The problem is, whilst you may find it "quite characteristic" yourself, the creation of this topic and the 72 pages of discussion that follows clearly demonstrates that a large amount of people do actually find it quite shoddy and cheap, especially for somewhere that is considered to be the best theme park in the country. You're not talking about a 3 quid ghost train that people go on for a laugh, guests are paying upwards of £40 for a day at the park and they expect quality.
That's what I want Tower's do to Duel, not rip most of the props and effects out and call it a day.
Disneylands original Haunted Mansion still have most of their effects which are now over 50 years old in terms of execution as well, and people still love them.
Again, they've already ripped out/damaged beyond repair a lot of the props and effects when it was rethemed to Duel. That's only been further reduced as the ride has not undergone any sort of major refurbishment over the years and even more things have stopped working completely and likely need a full replacement (i.e the trommel) - you can only restore things if there is something left to restore in the first place.
As for Disney, of course they have effects that are over 50 years old. But at the same time, a lot of the ride has been tweaked and amended over the years during their extensive rehabs that they schedule in. So whilst they may "look" the same, they've been gradually plussed and upgraded to take into account things like new style lighting etc that they've put in over the years. In short, it's been very well looked after - Duel blatantly has not.
I've already mentioned that restoring things exactly back to how they were is impossible due to lighting, but the other factor is that the public's perception of what people want from a ride has changed too. Should a refurb back to Haunted House be on the cards, you have to remember a huge chunk of people haven't even ridden Haunted House - me being one of them! It's fine to have some nostalgia for the guests who rode it back in the 90s. But, the aim of this would be to secure the ride's future for years to come, so it needs to impress everyone - from former riders of Haunted House, or just of Duel right through to completely new visitors who've never been on either of them before.
The refurb to Duel never achieved that aim. It was done lazily on the cheap to quickly gamify the ride and take advantage of the video game/console craze at the time - serving to attract only that section of guests. It failed to give consideration to the ride's history, existing physical theming, or to those guests who perhaps didn't want to go around Haunted House shooting crap LED targets.
I'm hoping if we are seeing a return of the Haunted House, it ends up being a refurb that does manage to impress everyone. An evolution of the previous ride, with elements harking back to the original, but also taking the opportunity to use new features and take advantage of new technology (and no, that doesn't mean screens - I'm in full agreement we need physical theming!). I don't see a need for them to have to restore the majority of old scenes/elements just for nostalgia's sake. I would much rather they had the freedom to design the ride to ensure that the experience flows and properly fits with today's lighting and other technology, rather than doing things the other way round and trying to shoehorn the lighting in to fit current/restored scenes - that's precisely one of the reasons it's in the state it's in right now.