Well I did wonder where all the new money for this great new era was supposed to come from? I remain as sceptical as I was 12 pages ago.
The money would have come from a cash injection from Merlin’s new private owners, would it not? Scott O’Neil could have asked for more money from the owners to implement sweeping changes, or money could have been redirected from other parts of Merlin’s business to invest into the parks. When Legoland Belgium was cancelled not that long ago, Scott O’Neil said that it was cancelled in favour of investment into the company’s existing parks.
I’m still somewhat hopeful. Chessington’s waterpark plans are only stalled due to planning application troubles, and in terms of new rides for next year other than Project Ocean, there were rumours of Thorpe Park building a new flat ride, were there not? There’s been a trademark from Merlin for “Skybound”, anyhow, as well as recent clearance of the former Slammer site. Project Ocean is a positive sign, in my view.
Granted, they haven’t done
everything right by any stretch of the imagination. I think the cuts to opening hours are disappointing. However, I don’t think everything bad happening is something that the new Merlin team can control. For example, I think some of the ride availability issues are a result of a number of chickens coming home to roost at once following years of evident under-investment in preventative maintenance. For example, the long-term closures of rides like Hex and the Skyride are not the fault of the new Merlin team. Admittedly, that doesn’t explain some of the other hiccups, and ride availability in general does seem to have drastically worsened in the last year or so, but I think a large component of the ride availability issues isn’t something that the new team can currently be blamed for.
I’m not saying that they’ve been infallible or that they haven’t made mistakes by any stretch, but I think that blaming the likes of Scott O’Neil and Bianca Samut for the current state of the parks is a bit like blaming Keir Starmer for the current state of the UK’s public services. Many of the things going wrong at the parks are a result of much longer term decisions that can’t be reversed very easily or quickly, and as far as I can tell, effort is being made to rectify these in some regards.
For instance, I think the impending reopening of Hex is a very positive sign at Alton Towers; that attraction clearly needed money spending on it, but they spent the money and are bringing it back to life. The same is soon to happen with the Skyride. I don’t think we’d have seen this sort of spend on refurbishments under the old Merlin management, and it does reflect a dedication to ongoing maintenance that the old management simply lacked.
I’m not saying that things are perfect at the parks right now by any means, but I think there are positive signs. Rectifying the issues was always going to be a marathon rather than a sprint, and many of those issues could not have been rectified within one year or so.