If I’m being honest, I sometimes think the rhetoric used on here is a tad alarmist with regard to the long term trajectory of the resort.
I won’t deny that Alton certainly has its fair share of problems, and things are not all rosy at the moment by any means. There are undeniably a few significant problems to be addressed at the moment, and it would be highly disingenuous for me to suggest otherwise. Ride availability is evidently a big issue that urgently needs sorting, the lack of permanent flat rides does stand out, and the absence of attractions like Hex and Skyride is currently making things more difficult than they should be. The unknown status of Project Horizon, and the lack of any confirmed major ride investment in the foreseeable future, is concerning. While I haven’t personally tried it, the Aramark food is also contentious, being poorly reviewed and highly priced.
However, as much as some of you make out that there’s a long, long to do list at Alton, I ask; is all of the stuff mentioned in these to do lists really absolutely life and death and needing to be done right now, or is it simply a nice to have? Every park in the world will have a to-do list to some extent, and some of the problems people mention do not sound to me like utterly urgent matters. They sound more like things that could be put on the back burner and kept in mind for the future rather than needing to be dealt with right this second. I’m confident that these things will be dealt with eventually, but I don’t think all of the things people mention are absolutely essential, more nice to haves. Every park in the world will have a similar to-do list of things to tackle, and no park is ever without its flaws and imperfections, so if Alton is in some sort of death spiral because of this kind of list, most parks in the world probably are!
I’d also say that if we look at the trajectory of the park and things that have happened in recent times, it’s far from solely negative, in my view.
They’re doing a nice job of gradually sprucing up sections of the park, with Gloomy Wood being spruced up very nicely with the addition of The Curse at Alton Manor and Forbidden Valley being spruced up very nicely with the Nemesis Reborn refurbishment. I have faith that they’ll eventually apply this treatment to other sections of the park and try and work their way around.
We are getting a new permanent flat ride next year, and there are utterances that this may not be the only one in store in the short to medium term (I believe Bianca referenced 3 flat rides, did she not?). Project Ocean is certainly a start, and if it’s joined by a couple of other flat rides in the short to medium term (it’s not out of the question that others may join it next year, given the GDO rules in parts of the park…), I think that would go some way towards rectifying things. If Hex and Skyride also return, then they along with some flat rides should make things better.
On the subject of Hex and Skyride; as much as people like to moan about the extended closure of both, there is clearly strong will within the park to get them back open, and I have faith that both will be back in operation in 2025. With Hex in particular, we have been shown proof by Bianca that they are putting a lot of effort into getting that ride back open.
In terms of opening hours; people may moan about them, but they’re better than they once were in some regards. Midweek closures are no more. The number of those ever-controversial 4pm closes is reducing.
In terms of major investments; I would like to hope that Project Horizon is still on its way within the next couple of years, as much as it is currently in limbo and its status is unknown. With that being said, I fully agree that the park needs a new major investment within the next few years, and it would be concerning if Horizon has been cancelled or pushed back significantly with no replacement new ride of equivalent calibre.
I’d also say that I think it’s difficult to tell what the trajectory will be simply because we’ve had a wholesale change in management at both Alton Towers and Merlin within the last year or two. Much of the senior management team at Merlin who influenced many of the previous decisions are now gone, and Scott O’Neil and his new team will naturally have a different mark to make on the parks to what Varney and the old guard did. Alton Towers itself has also had a big change in management, with Bianca Samut coming along as Divisional Director along with various other new managers. While Merlin being a private company is not a new development at this point, I think it is too early to tell how Scott O’Neil and the like intend to run Merlin in the long term and they can’t be blamed for every single thing that’s wrong. Blaming Bianca Samut and Scott O’Neil for every problem at Alton Towers would be like blaming Keir Starmer and the Labour Party for the current state of UK public services. Starmer simply hasn’t been in long enough to be responsible for everything that’s currently wrong with the UK, and the same can be said for Bianca Samut and Scott O’Neil with regard to Alton Towers.
So overall, then, I don’t think things are as bad as people make out, and with the wholesale change in management at both Alton Towers and Merlin, I think it’s too early to tell what the overall trajectory will be under the tenure of Bianca Samut and Scott O’Neil. There are positive signs, and there are some not so positive signs.