The I-Drive Trolley runs up and down I-Drive all day and night. That is where most of the major shopping along I-Drive. The Prime Outlet Malls is always packed. The Festival Bay Mall will be next door also. The parents will be shopping while the kids are on the rides. Especially at night I-Drive is very crowded, so they already have a built-in crowd with Hotels, restaurants, and shopping nearby.
You missed the point, It was stated earlier that Universal should have purchased the plot for expansion. My question was how would Universal guests access the property from Universal.
Universal had owned 2,000 acres of Lockheed Martin property until a few years ago when they sold off most of it. That property would not have been adjacent either.
And it wasn't open to Universal guests as an expansion plot either.
there is a reason you don't find parks that exclusively have rides like this in FL--every time there is a thunderstorm (so every afternoon from June thru the end of September), the entire park will need to close since there won't be any shows or dark rides for guests to ride.
As other posters stated,this guy was in with HRP and Freestyle Park.When HRP opened,I told my wife this was nothing more than a tax write-off for the investors.This guy starts another company to buy HRP after HRP went bankrupt.I told DW another tax write-off.We went 1 time to Freestyle got half off with local discount and thought while we were there...you've got to be kidding.
Sounds like a weekend at Cedar Point with wind!!
You've got a point, but none of the coasters proposed for this site are on the epic scale that Busch Gardens, and Sea World, for that matter, build theirs on. If the terrain-following Cheetaka or whatever they're calling it now is as good as I think it's going to be, word of mouth should keep Busch Gardens Tampa in great shape for a long time.
Still, this place looks awesome. I'm a little wary of how fun it would be though. I'm a huge coaster buff, but I likes my theming too. Surely they're going to have creative names and paint schemes for these things, and a tree or two to make this place livable. A parking lot full of rollercoasters and queue switchbacks can't be a fun place to spend more than an hour.
Then again, maybe that's their business model. Park for $20, pay $50 to get in, ride everything once and maybe buy a $5 coke and get out. Works for me, if I'm doing Sea World or something for half the day.
There was a timetable for HRP to get new investors before they went bankrupt. A Saudi investor put that timetable up so he could write off his losses BEFORE HRP filed for bankruptcy to get his money back. It was reported in the Sun News in Myrtle Beach before Freestyle was even mentioned.^If you look further into the story, it wasn't for a tax write off. Some day there will be a college style study/book on Hard Rock Park/Freestyle Music Park story.
Basically yes.It was 2 men from Myrtle Beach that was on the board for HRP and while HRP was failing,they started an LLC when HRP filed for bankruptcy to buy out the park and had to change the theming to not get sued by Hard Rock Corp. for using any logos or theming. Now BMW is suing them for using Mini Cooper style cars on a coaster.So, the guy creates companies to get investors and open theme parks, then gets a tax write-off when they go bankrupt? I didn't realize this guy is the same who developed HRP. I thought it was group that bought HRP and renamed it to Freestyle. If they are one and the same, then that is just plain bizzare and makes no sense. How can you own a property, then go bankrupt, then start another company to buy the property that you just went bankrupt with?
It sounds over-ambitious to me...and there is a reason you don't find parks that exclusively have rides like this in FL--every time there is a thunderstorm (so every afternoon from June thru the end of September), the entire park will need to close since there won't be any shows or dark rides for guests to ride. While the idea of a thrill-ride-only park sounds fun, it belongs in a drier climate. The fact that Six Flags and Cedar Fair have steered clear of FL should tell OTP's developers something. Best of luck to them, however. Any competition is a good thing--might make Disney build an E-ticket or two...
My post goes more towards the fact the entire park was built as a cover recover losses from the mall that was there before. After that the entire situation was a cluster of lying and lawbreaking.There was a timetable for HRP to get new investors before they went bankrupt. A Saudi investor put that timetable up so he could write off his losses BEFORE HRP filed for bankruptcy to get his money back. It was reported in the Sun News in Myrtle Beach before Freestyle was even mentioned.
It sounds over-ambitious to me...and there is a reason you don't find parks that exclusively have rides like this in FL--every time there is a thunderstorm (so every afternoon from June thru the end of September), the entire park will need to close since there won't be any shows or dark rides for guests to ride. While the idea of a thrill-ride-only park sounds fun, it belongs in a drier climate. The fact that Six Flags and Cedar Fair have steered clear of FL should tell OTP's developers something. Best of luck to them, however. Any competition is a good thing--might make Disney build an E-ticket or two...
Even when it does rain, there isn't any lightning.
I think weather will be the least of their concerns. First, There isn't a thunderstorm EVERY afternoon in the summer. It doesn't even rain everyday.Even when it does rain, there isn't any lightning. And even when there is a thunderstorm, it only lasts a hour or two.And the nights are usually pretty niceand calm.
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