Interesting development in Ohio. This will effect all the county and state fairs as well as permanent amusement parks -
Yes, people should. But I'd imagine that the parks can't operate under such a utopian thought process.
I've seen enough notalwaysright.com stories plus have some time under my belt in retail to know that even some of the more intelligent and/or nice people lose their shit and/or get totally confused over any change to the normal situation, no matter how well it's explained or logically thought out. And that's before you get into the entitlement issues.
Granted, this isn't a strict retail translation, but I'm thinking there's a general correlation.
But that being written, I'd also venture to guess that most parks won't show guests anything other than whether they can or can't reserve any given date.
Capacity is different from attendance. While yes restaurants, theaters, and individual buildings have governmental imposed capacity limits parks themselves don't have such set numbers.
Magic Kingdom had approximately 20,859,000 guests for the year. When divided into 365 days, that gives an average of 57,148 guests per day (Side Note: I did round to the nearest whole number). So I would feel confident in saying when taking into the current situations requirements, if they were going to cut capacity, I would imagine their goal would be to restrict attendance to a daily 14, 287 guests per day to start with.
Just because you purchased an annual pass does not mean you can use it every day without fear of being turned away due to a multitude of reasons. The biggest reason being park capacity.
If you're referring to Disney, CEO Chapek said they will not open any park unless they can add to the profit level. (In other words, they're not opening to just break even).Do they need to break even to open or just not lose more than they were when closed.
I was merely replying to your pervious statement that "buildings have government imposed capacity limits parks themselves dont have set numbers"....your follow up reply was that someone should contact the JCC Fire Marshall to see what the exact numbers for BGW are.....so in one statement you say there are no set numbers but then in another you say there are?First off, the purpose of that quoted section was to provide my insight of (after working and dealing with attendance at BGW) how little the parks and their regulatory agencies care about actual, physical people in terms of numbers. I have personally seen and been told that there is no set number for capacity. They fit in as many people as they can. However, instead of debating this topic, someone can actually contact the James City County Fire Marshall and simply ask what the capacity of BGW is exactly, or you can dig through whatever codes there are and determine capacity by that method. Regardless, please do everyone a favor and provide sources and information accordingly, similarly to how I provided actual research and a link to the information.
Now, as for reducing capacity, there have been a multitude of percentages thrown around regarding how much a park would be limited by. One source, Mr. Chapek I think, publicly stated that they would aim for less than 25% upon first opening; however, that may only reference Shanghai. In that event, as far as Orlando is concerned, the guidelines discussed mentioned a 50% reduction moving up to a 75% reduction based on phases. Feel free to input any percentage you desire. That said, do not sit there and declare that at 25% operating capacity that the parks won't reopen due to not making enough money. Unless you have any kind of research or information to share, you can not make such bold and outlandish claims. Furthermore, this is an enthusiast thread, not a real-life theme park operation that we are planning out. I never claimed that they could make money or that they will definitively open with that. I was merely offering a means of calculating capacity based on estimated attendance figures. Obviously, their capacity may be higher than their previous attendance; which is why I tried to make it very clear that all these numbers are merely estimates. They are realistic estimates -- meaning, that their just very good guesses using some form of industry standard research and that the capacities may not be too far off. However, when I said it was an average, it should have clued in that this number may actually be slightly higher.
No, I do not believe it is luck to determine which day you get to go. However, if their reservation system is anything like current dining reservations, you will have to wake up right before midnight and keep refreshing their website 6 months in advance. Yes, you would have to put that little bit of effort in to it. Also, your assumption is based on the idea that everyone in the world will have access to these reservations. Currently, there are restrictions on international flights. If international guests really do make up the majority of WDW's attendance, then that actually makes it easier for pass holders to reserve and be able to show up. However, I will agree that reservations may be busy simply because it is Disney, but as others have pointed out 60% of Americans don't want to visit theme parks before a vaccine. If the parks reopen before a vaccine, attendance will naturally be slow making a reservation system even easier.
I will also concede that anyone with existing reservations is going to be stuck in a mess. WDW may decide to cancel all existing reservations or otherwise offer to reschedule. More than likely, I believe that WDW will announce that any existing reservations will have to be rescheduled or rebooked.
Which is what Bob Chapek said in the Disney quarterly conference call two days ago -Something to keep in mind is that parks may opt to open at a low capacity to get their operations worked out and staff trained on new procedures.
I was merely replying to your pervious statement that "buildings have government imposed capacity limits parks themselves dont have set numbers"....your follow up reply was that someone should contact the JCC Fire Marshall to see what the exact numbers for BGW are.....so in one statement you say there are no set numbers but then in another you say there are?
In your second paragraph you are discussing percentages, I never debated that. I was however talking about how you came up with figuring your park capacity by taking the yearly attendance, dividing by 365 and coming up with daily attendance then taking a percentage of that.
Lastly my bold and outlandish statement....as you said. It was Chapek who said they will not open unless they can turn a profit.
I dont remember anyone so far saying parks would be limited to 25% of their average attendance for a year per day. That makes no sense and I dont think you would want the Disney number crunchers using that math because they would just as soon stay closed as lose money each day using math that gives them attendance that low.
For church, high school, college and university auditoriums, and for theaters, general auditoriums, stadiums and other similar places of assembly, at least one (1)parking space for every five (5)fixed seats provided in said building.
This article from the last parking expansion has the total number of spots:I'm not sure of, and can't find anything that indicates the number of parking spaces at BGW.
I can attest, in 4+ seasons, I never heard that big of a number. Low 30's it's even a tough number to achieve7,641 spaces, each with say a family of four would equate to an approximate capacity of 30,564; which is actually a fairly close estimate to what I've seen in the park. Typically, BGW will cap around 30-35K, but depending on the groups that show up I've heard it get to 40K.
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