The article, as stated a couple times above in this very thread, states that the park will not reopen and the land will be redeveloped.
I know how this is going to come across, but this is seriously not meant to be insulting in any way - I just want you to better yourself.You guys think they’re gonna reopen the park but with a different name?
www.learningrx.com
I know how this is going to come across, but this is seriously not meant to be insulting in any way - I just want you to better yourself.
You may find that something like these can help you:
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It would help your interactions here, and I imagine in life in general, go so much better for everyone involved, including yourself.
This would be excellent and I think it could prove to be a consistent money maker if implemented correctly. Would make an awesome kinetic centerpiece for the development!While it won't be a theme park anymore, I think it would be neat if they still incorporated Wild One into whatever they're planning, just because of its history and age. Have it become a premium pay-per-ride attraction.
You hit the neil on its head. The real Largo Towne Center kinda failed which was built at the former Capitol Center site now a hospital. No one wants to be in this county other than the housing developers and buyer's who buy the houses which pays most of the tax bill for the county.Looking deeper into things only makes me more worried. Durant is the owner of 35V and is likely there for two reasons 1: financial backing of some sort 2: create some good PR for the company that's really in charge, the TBA Group. This is based off the fact that it looks like Durant's company has zero experience in real estate.
Looking at TBA Group's projects.....woah boy. Whole lot of housing and industrial spaces on their website. Nothing here I see screams "redevelop the area for entertainment purposes". The lack of a concrete plan is worrying as well, either they have no clue what they want for the space or they have a plan and just don't want to tell the public because it'll lead to backlash. Looking at their portfolio I'm leaning towards the second. I don't know anything about the people who run this company but I don't know why a company with zero entertainment/leisure experience would suddenly take on such a massive entertainment/leisure project.
I mean if this actually does go the entertainment route I think an indoor waterpark complex with a hotel would work. I just have doubts that this is the direction the developers even want to go.I don’t think much will remain in the transition, but a small/regional waterpark could make it into the plans. SFA’s waterpark was a success and that would probably be the easiest thing to copy over to a new development.
While economic conditions don't help, the location of that land is always going to be a problem. It's 4 miles outside the beltway and away from Metro on a road with little other major development beyond strip malls. Throw in the need to do major overhaul and clean up, it's just not a desirable property.Given that this buyer doesn't seem to actually even have solid concepts of a plan (let alone a meaningful vision or path set out to actually bring anything to fruition on the site in the short to medium term) and given that the sale announcement came much later than originally anticipated, I sorta assume interest in the property was... uh... not overwhelming. It really does feel like Six Flags precisely selected the absolute worst possible economic and political moment at which to put a large swath of land in the national capital region on the market.
This new story from WTOP cites a county supervisor estimating 12 to 18 months before zoning changes are likely to even be evaluated:
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What Prince George’s Co. doesn’t want at the Six Flags site - WTOP News
It’s not all fun and games when you’re trying to figure out what to do with a massive amusement park site in Prince George’s County.wtop.com
Feels like we're already solidly on the dreaded "close a park and struggle to redevelop the land for a decade+ before putting up single family housing" path we've seen so many times before. Ironically, if a developer put ten years of time, money, and effort into overhauling Six Flags America instead of trying to start from scratch, they could probably come out on the other end with the major entertainment destination the county wants—but the county seems set on a flashier, more immediate pipedream that I reckon they're relatively unlikely to ever see come to fruition.
Outside of maybe a casino or sports stadium, which there isn't infinite demand for, there's not much to build there beyond housing and minor retail. Any type of mall or mixed use is likely to fail, when it can't even work in more convenient locations west of there.
I should also mention the Landover Mall lot has been empty for close to a decade undeveloped. Way back in the day that mall was so awesome.Another thing that kind of factors into the "What do they do with the land?" conversation is the Commanders stadium. They are now planned to be out by 2030 and I assume that stadium be demolished and turned into the same mixed use zoning this is and its like right down the road from this. As before BLVD at CAP CTR was a complete failure, but the idea of two large plots with the same goals in an area. How's that going to work when they could not support what is now a hospital center.
Can’t wait for BLVD at FEDEX, BLVD atAnother thing that kind of factors into the "What do they do with the land?" conversation is the Commanders stadium. They are now planned to be out by 2030 and I assume that stadium be demolished and turned into the same mixed use zoning this is and its like right down the road from this. As before BLVD at CAP CTR was a complete failure, but the idea of two large plots with the same goals in an area. How's that going to work when they could not support what is now a hospital center.
They were really holding out for the new FBI HQ along with Greenbelt (2 sites in PG were better odds than 1 in VA) but that didn’t turn out well for either state. Meanwhile the Woodmore development up the road seems to be thriving with Wegmans (major get for PG well before DC or MoCo had one) and Costco as well as a bunch of dining. No theater, just a gym. I could see some outdoor recreation uses at the old SFA like zip line courses (great for school field trips and camps), Ninja Warrior style obstacle courses, etc to complement whatever else they have going in there, but it’s going to be a challengeI should also mention the Landover Mall lot has been empty for close to a decade undeveloped. Way back in the day that mall was so awesome.
I hadn't seen a sale price on the land. How big of a loss are we talking?How much of a benefit is there by moving on from this property at a loss, and a major loss at that?
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