Matt N
TS Member
- Favourite Ride
- Shambhala (PortAventura Park)
Another thing worth taking into account is that the park was EU-funded for its first few years, and attractions like Hyperion, Zadra et al were funded from the money they were given by the EU, as far as I’m aware. I also gather that all of the EU-funded projects had to open by a certain date or the funding would be withdrawn.
Could this slowing in pace simply correlate with the loss of EU funding, both in terms of lower urgency and no more seemingly limitless funds?
I’ve heard that the park can get pretty busy during the summer, so I’d imagine that it does make plenty of money.
As @Shaggy_Dog_ pointed out, it is also worth noting that the park is pretty young in the grand scheme of things (relative to the other European parks it’s often compared with). It’s only 9 years old; at that age, Alton Towers was mostly generic, unthemed fairground rides, with the themed stuff only properly taking hold after the Tussauds acquisition. Nick Varney even said in a promo for the 1992 season that that year’s investments were about eliminating Alton Towers’ reputation as “a fun fair in the woods”.
Not to mention that the park has only really become a “household name”, so to speak, among theme park enthusiasts in the last 5 years or so. Hyperion turns 5 this year, Zadra and Abyssus are less than 5, and even Formula is only 7 years old.
My point is that Energylandia is still such a young park. A lot will probably change as it grows and develops, and I suspect that it is definitely still a work in progress.
Could this slowing in pace simply correlate with the loss of EU funding, both in terms of lower urgency and no more seemingly limitless funds?
I’ve heard that the park can get pretty busy during the summer, so I’d imagine that it does make plenty of money.
As @Shaggy_Dog_ pointed out, it is also worth noting that the park is pretty young in the grand scheme of things (relative to the other European parks it’s often compared with). It’s only 9 years old; at that age, Alton Towers was mostly generic, unthemed fairground rides, with the themed stuff only properly taking hold after the Tussauds acquisition. Nick Varney even said in a promo for the 1992 season that that year’s investments were about eliminating Alton Towers’ reputation as “a fun fair in the woods”.
Not to mention that the park has only really become a “household name”, so to speak, among theme park enthusiasts in the last 5 years or so. Hyperion turns 5 this year, Zadra and Abyssus are less than 5, and even Formula is only 7 years old.
My point is that Energylandia is still such a young park. A lot will probably change as it grows and develops, and I suspect that it is definitely still a work in progress.