Walt Disney New No. 2 – Shanghai Disney Resort?

DVCOwner

A Long Time DVC Member
Original Poster
From the LA Times:

When it comes to theme parks, the Walt Disney Co. could have a new No. 2 – Shanghai Disney Resort.

Speaking at the UBS 41st annual Global Media and Communications Conference on Tuesday, Chief Financial Officer Jay Rasulo said that Disney’s forthcoming park and resort in Shanghai could become “the second largest Disney destination in the world” behind the Walt Disney World Resort in the Orlando, Fla., area.

According to the Themed Entertainment Assn., which ranks theme parks worldwide by attendance, 17.5 million people visited Disney’s Magic Kingdom property in Orlando last year – good for the highest attendance of any amusement park in the world.

The Shanghai property, which is under construction and projected to open at the end of 2015, is slated to include two hotels, 495,000 square feet of retail space, a dining and entertainment venue, a lake and other facilities and amenities.

The theme park will have a version of the Burbank-based entertainment company’s Enchanted Storybook Castle -- a prominent feature at other Disney theme parks around the world.

Rasulo said the company has “big expectations” for the property, adding that Shanghai Disney will be situated in a “somewhat entertainment-deprived country.”

“They have focused on many aspects of development in China and not surprisingly entertainment and leisure has lagged,” he said. He noted the park and resort will be located within three hours of 330 million people.

“We believe we are developing a park that will absolutely blow people away...we look for big things there,” Rasulo said.

Rasulo said the park has reached a construction milestone – it has gone “vertical,” moving above ground.

“If you saw a picture of it today you would clearly see the outline of what will be a theme park,” he said. “Six months ago you wouldn’t have been able to see that.”

He said that the park and resort, upon opening, will be situated on a land mass of nearly 1,000 acres, making it the third largest in terms of physical size behind Walt Disney World and Disneyland Paris. He said that the company and the Shanghai government are “eager and willing to expand rapidly after that.”

At Disney's annual meeting in March, Disney Chairman and Chief Executive Robert Iger said he'd spent 15 years on the Shanghai project.

"This is personally very special to me," he said.
 

PeterAlt

Well-Known Member
From the LA Times:

When it comes to theme parks, the Walt Disney Co. could have a new No. 2 – Shanghai Disney Resort.

Speaking at the UBS 41st annual Global Media and Communications Conference on Tuesday, Chief Financial Officer Jay Rasulo said that Disney’s forthcoming park and resort in Shanghai could become “the second largest Disney destination in the world” behind the Walt Disney World Resort in the Orlando, Fla., area.

According to the Themed Entertainment Assn., which ranks theme parks worldwide by attendance, 17.5 million people visited Disney’s Magic Kingdom property in Orlando last year – good for the highest attendance of any amusement park in the world.

The Shanghai property, which is under construction and projected to open at the end of 2015, is slated to include two hotels, 495,000 square feet of retail space, a dining and entertainment venue, a lake and other facilities and amenities.

The theme park will have a version of the Burbank-based entertainment company’s Enchanted Storybook Castle -- a prominent feature at other Disney theme parks around the world.

Rasulo said the company has “big expectations” for the property, adding that Shanghai Disney will be situated in a “somewhat entertainment-deprived country.”

“They have focused on many aspects of development in China and not surprisingly entertainment and leisure has lagged,” he said. He noted the park and resort will be located within three hours of 330 million people.

“We believe we are developing a park that will absolutely blow people away...we look for big things there,” Rasulo said.

Rasulo said the park has reached a construction milestone – it has gone “vertical,” moving above ground.

“If you saw a picture of it today you would clearly see the outline of what will be a theme park,” he said. “Six months ago you wouldn’t have been able to see that.”

He said that the park and resort, upon opening, will be situated on a land mass of nearly 1,000 acres, making it the third largest in terms of physical size behind Walt Disney World and Disneyland Paris. He said that the company and the Shanghai government are “eager and willing to expand rapidly after that.”

At Disney's annual meeting in March, Disney Chairman and Chief Executive Robert Iger said he'd spent 15 years on the Shanghai project.

"This is personally very special to me," he said.
Sad. Just sad. The fact that Disney will let this happen is yet sadder. Very sad. Very, very sad.
 

DVCOwner

A Long Time DVC Member
Original Poster
I do not think that this is bad for the domestic resorts. Some of the attractions in the foreign resorts will also be constructed in the domestic parks, reducing the cost and hopefully getting more stateside.
 

wm49rs

A naughty bit o' crumpet
Premium Member
Well, if nothing else I'm sure DL will be able to take away some lessons in dealing with crowds and high smog levels....
 

cheezbat

Well-Known Member
I do not think that this is bad for the domestic resorts. Some of the attractions in the foreign resorts will also be constructed in the domestic parks, reducing the cost and hopefully getting more stateside.

Yeah...at Disneyland.

WDW will just keep getting jack squat.
 

DVCOwner

A Long Time DVC Member
Original Poster
Here is why I think this will help the parks in the US. If Disney works like many large business, each park has its own accounting. So just for discussion, let say a ride cost $50 million to design for the park in Shanghai. If it is made first in Shanghai, Disney only pays 48 percent of the total cost. So Disney pays $24 million for this new high tech ride. To than build it in the US Disney would only have to pay 1/2 the cost of development for the ride back to the Shanghai Park or $25 million. On top of that 48 percent of the refund would go to Disney, so the actual cost to design the ride for a US park would be only about $12 million. I think this would allow for more attractions to be made in the US parks.
 

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