RE: Project Madrid: New Hamlet? Giga Coaster? 315' Tower?
halfabee said:
Lacking any real reason to play devil's advocate at the moment, I will play devil's advocate with myself and argue that is EXACTLY why I should be playing devil's advocate right now. I think I have a good point there, so I guess I'll change my mind and type this out instead of keeping it to myself:
Is the 45th anniversary really that big of a deal, considering that the 50th is relatively close and so momentous? I mean, wouldn't it make more sense to time massive expansion plans for a 50th anniversary, if they were going to be tied to an anniversary at all?
I'd think the decision for large capital improvements would be driven much more strongly by corporate's perception of the market and the availability of ample investment funds, the latter of which would seem to be in fairly short supply at the moment -- rather than the by a desire to get the timing right for a 45th anniversary celebration.
And how would they follow up that kind of 45th anniversary when the 50th comes around?
*interlocks fingers, pushes arms out to crack knuckles*
Ok some counter arguments:
So opening these things as a 50th anniversary gift to yourself would be nice. But how much would that overshadow the actual anniversary?
The 50th is also 8 years (7.5 really if you count this season as 'over') off. Would you really want to sit on something that big for 8 years? Let's say this attraction is built without a hamlet. How much do you risk a DF situation where the ride is kinda isolated, not a whole lot of draw to the area?
I think you would want all of this done by 2020 (45th) and make a loose connection there. Talk about how it's been 45 years.
Then the big 5-0.....that's when you come out with your next 8th coaster (or 9th depending on Tempesto). Find a really unique coaster to build, or you revive DF and have it on the park at that point. But a huge coaster on the 50th might overshadow what being open for 50 years means. I would think for the 50th they would want to do some summer long events. Fireworks more often, revive some 1975 things.
One cool thing I always thought some park should do for a big anniversary:
"Opening" day. On the actual opening day of the (May 16th) park have everything be what the original price was. Have a ceremony at the main gate. Have some things around or set up display boards with pictures of what the area looked like.
Ophf I got off track there a bit.
Basically, I would rather see them really celebrate the 50th by focused on events with the park as a whole, some small 'gifts' to itself, and enjoy what you are. Do all your expanding before then, and building bigger rides. It also gives them prolonged "exposure" because even if you do the new hamlet and coaster in 2020, by the time the excitement dies down, you've hit the 50th anniversary and your just riding a tidal wave of people being excited about you.