JohnyKaz2078
Well-Known Member
Interesting. I thought that they remained open during the winter season after Christmas. Thanks for the info!Europa Park will close off its summer season on November 4th this year. The winter season will start on November 24th and end daily operation on January 6th 2019. It will be open an additional weekend on January 12th and 13th 2019 before closing the rest of January, February and reopening late March. So yes, it is a seasonal operation with roughly 3 months of closure.
Phantasialand is nearly the same except the winter season ends January 20th 2019. I visited in Winter years ago and it was quite an experience! It had snowed overnight, so maintenance was sweeping snow off coaster tracks when we showed up in the morning and they had turned the river rapids ride into a skating rink. They had campfires around the paths to keep guests warm.
London is not an option for Disney since planning permission would be impossible to get and the fact the land that could be built on is so expensive. Look up the Warner Bros studio tour with Harry Potter: in order to get permission to build and open, they had to control traffic in the area by only selling a fixed number of tickets in advance to the park. Walk-ups are not allowed. Imagine now a Disney park with a potential 10 million visitors a year and think of all the restrictions that would be placed on Disney.
Rome tourist demographic is not theme park oriented at all.
Back to Asia, Taiwan is a hot potato politically and Disney and Universal would lose it all in China if they would build there. Look up the recent thing with Mainland China where they forced foreign airlines that serve China to stop referring to Taiwan as just "Taiwan". Also, notice that there are little embassies for foreign countries in Taiwan...
South Korea already has Lotte World (owned by the Lotte Group) and Everland (owned by Samsung) near Seoul. More south, you have Gyeongju World that cornered the market in that area with a brand new 20 million dollars B&M Dive Coaster and a large waterpark. Competition there will be quite ferocious and I am curious to see if Universal Studios Korea plans will be revived or it will join Universal Studios Dubailand in the "announced but never built category".
What you say it's true about London. But it is without doubt that it would be a smashing success. Maybe that's what they can present to the city's administration to help them get the planning permission.
Rome doesn't have any big theme parks around it (to the extend of say Gardaland and Efteling). You can't judge the behavior of citizens and tourists if there isn't something they can be judged on.
Back to Asia I never said that Disney or Uni are planning any kind of theme park in Taiwan and South Korea. It doesn't make sense anyway since they are located between Japan and China and both of them have Disney or Universal parks (Beijing opens in 2020) so it would hurt the other ones.