Jump to content

Could Florida support another "theme" park?


Recommended Posts

What's the likelihood of Florida getting a $26 million Bear Grylls theme park?

 

To see the entire story follow this link.

https://www.orlandoweekly.com/Blogs/archives/2018/07/24/whats-the-likelihood-of-florida-getting-a-26-million-bear-grylls-theme-park

 

 

Florida portion of the article

 

With months still to go until the new attraction opens its doors, Merlin is already looking to open other locations with Merlin Entertainments CEO Nick Varney confirming projects in both China and the United States are already in the works.
 

The archery section of the Bear Grylls Adventure - IMAGE VIA BEAR GRYLLS ADVENTURE | FACEBOOK
  • Image via Bear Grylls Adventure | Facebook
  • The archery section of the Bear Grylls Adventure

Merlin typically groups multiple midway attractions close to each other with tickets that include the numerous attractions being a primary offering. With a Legoland theme park, Madame Tussauds, and a Sea Life Aquarium, the Central Florida market has the most substantial Merlin presence of anywhere in the United States making it an appealing place for Merlin to invest more in. 

In Birmingham, Merlin has three attractions currently open with two more, including the Bear Grylls one, opening this year. One of the three attractions already open is the Six Flags like Alton Towers theme park. With multiple thrill rides, Alton Towers draws a large number of the same key late teen through twenty-somethings demographics that the Bear Grylls attraction is designed to appeal to. 

Merlin operates no attractions designed for this demographic in the United States. Previously, Merlin was rumored to be interested in buying the Busch Gardens duo of theme parks from SeaWorld though both parties now confirm no such sale is moving forward. Despite the deal not happening Merlin expressing interest in those coaster heavy parks shows that the company is willing to go after the same thrill-seeking demographic here that it draws in with its coaster based parks in the U.K. 
 

Concept art for the highly themed maze experience at the Bear Grylls Adventure - IMAGE VIA BEAR GRYLLS ADVENTURE | FACEBOOK
  • Image via Bear Grylls Adventure | Facebook
  • Concept art for the highly themed maze experience at the Bear Grylls Adventure

With a seemingly endless amount of escape rooms, high ropes courses, skydiving options, and thrill rides the Central Florida market may prove a tricky one for Merlin who has up to now seen success with their operations here, notwithstanding exiting from operating the formerly named Orlando Eye observation wheel earlier this year. 

But the Bear Grylls Adventure brings name recognition and theming that few other adventure attractions in the Central Florida market have. The only Orlando area attraction to the scale of the Bear Grylls is the Andretti Indoor Karting and Games, located just down the street from Merlin’s Orlando Madame Tussauds and Sea Life Aquarium. Since opening late last year, Andretti has been extremely popular. Together with the TopGolf next door, the Andretti Orlando location can host corporate events with more than doublethe 2,000 per day capacity of the Birmingham Bear Grylls Adventure and regularly hosts events with numbers at or above that of the Bear Grylls Adventure’s size. 
 

A map of the four main challenges at the Bear Grylls Adventure - IMAGE VIA BEAR GRYLLS ADVENTURE | YOUTUBE
  • Image via Bear Grylls Adventure | YouTube
  • A map of the four main challenges at the Bear Grylls Adventure

At more than three times the square footage of Orlando’s Sea Life Aquarium (which mirrors the Orlando Madame Tussauds both with 25,000 sq. ft.), the Bear Grylls Adventure is larger than a typical Merlin midway attraction and would require a large footprint even if the concept was to be built from the ground up, unlike the retrofit that Merlin is doing at the Birmingham location. 

Both a skydive experience and high ropes course have been rumored for ICON Orlando 360, formerly I-Drive 360. But with the Bear Grylls Adventure requiring such a large footprint, its unlikely Merlin would build one at that location. The developer of ICON Orlando 360, Unicorp, does own property directly across the street from 360 with previous plans for that property now looking to be on hold as they focus on a massive new entertainment complex slated for Palm Parkway near the Vineland Avenue outlets. 

Despite being marketed to an entirely different demographic, the Legoland Florida Resort, in the heart of Polk County, might be a good option for a Bear Grylls Adventure. Also, unlike the majority of Legolands around the world, the Florida location offers no nearby Merlin attractions with the sole exceptions being the Orlando attractions, nearly 90 mins away, and the Legoland Water Park, for which a Legoland admission ticket is required. Merlin has stated numerous times that it plans to make the Winter Haven resort into a multi-day destination. Merlin opened a second hotel at the resort last year. 

Other possible locations for the Bear Grylls Adventure in the United States include San Francisco where Merlin operates a Madame Tussauds and the only Dungeons attraction in the country. Southern California where Merlin has a Legoland and a Sea Life aquarium is also a likely location. But with 30 attractions spread across the U.S., Merlin has plenty of areas they’re already in to open a Bear Grylls Adventure. 

With plans already in the works, it’s likely Merlin won’t wait long until they announce the next locations for the thrill-based entertainment centers. 

Link to post
Share on other sites
25 minutes ago, keith_h said:

I think Bear Grylls Adventure could be successful due to its uniqueness. It should appeal to the outdoor adventure type and would be good for a non-park day if near Orlando.

I agree and it doesn’t sound like a full day thing either? 

Link to post
Share on other sites

I have friends near Birmingham in the UK who are Merlin pass holders, will report back if they go to Bear Grylls Adventure there. I know it's just me but one thing about the article bothered me, Alton Towers is as about as far from Birmingham as Legoland is from Orlando.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...