Latest
issue
GET ATTRACTIONS MANAGEMENT
magazine
Yes! Send me the FREE digital edition of Attractions Management and the FREE weekly Attractions Management ezines and breaking news alerts!
Not right now, thanksclose this window I've already subscribed. I've already subscribed.
Get Attractions Management digital magazine FREE
Sign up here ▸
Jobs   News   Features   Products   Company profilesProfiles   Magazine   Handbook   Advertise    Subscribe  
Mystery shopper
Shanghai Haichang Ocean Park

A new Ocean Park operated by China’s largest theme park company has opened near Shanghai. Alice Davis paid a visit.

By Alice Davis | Published in Attractions Management 2019 issue 1


The newly opened Shanghai Haichang Ocean Park is located on the coast of the New Pudong District, perched on eastern China’s coastline, about 80 kilometres from the centre of the world’s most populated city. Supplemented by other attractions, Haichang Ocean Park Holdings currently owns and operates nine major marine theme parks across China.

The US$795m Shanghai Haichang Ocean Park is easily accessible from downtown Shanghai by the number 16 Metro Line (CN¥10, US$1.50). From the penultimate station, Lingang Avenue, a shuttle bus reportedly runs. I expected a dedicated park bus yet saw no sign of one; however, you can take the regular 1135 public bus from the Metro station directly to its terminal stop right outside the park (CN¥1, US$0.15). The total journey is approximately 90 minutes from Shanghai, with the Haichang park farther from the city than the nearby Shanghai Disneyland. The area has a ‘middle of nowhere’ feel about it, but seems to be yet another new district that’s being rapidly developed; no doubt the zone will look completely different 18 months from now.

For foreigners, it isn’t possible to book tickets via the park’s website as a Chinese ID card is needed to make an online booking. I had no trouble buying a ticket at the entrance on the morning I arrived (CN¥299, US$45). The park opens at 9.30am, when there were plenty of people milling around but no queues. Chinese citizens who buy online via their WeChat or Alipay app simply scan a QR code to enter the park. I was given a paper ticket and a map of the facility. I was pleased to find it was in English, as were many of the signposts and interactives in the park.

Five zones
This single-gate attraction is only open until 5pm – though this may be a seasonal schedule – and there is more than enough on offer to fill a day. The Qiulian River runs through the centre of the park, with two wide bridges connecting the two sections. Alternatively, visitors can take the colourful cable cars to traverse the site from the volcano-themed Whale Shark Hall at one end of the park to the snow-covered mountain Arctic Hall at the other.

These large structures, alongside some of the more garish themed areas, stand out from a distance, making the theme park exceptionally easy to navigate. Surrounded by water and reasonably well planted with trees, flowers and shrubbery, the landscaping is very pleasant and the park infrastructure is built to a high standard. A monster orange and purple rollercoaster, Steel Dolphin, straddles the river and weaves through a large portion of the site.

The park itself is divided into five different themed zones: Underwater Wonderlands, Ocean Tribes, Polar Town, Mermaid Bay, and Snow Kingdom.

My first stop was the Coral and Jellyfish Aquarium. The ever-popular clownfish are on show here, swimming with other exotic reef-dwelling species, while the next area is a dark mirror-lined room filled with huge cylindrical tanks, each containing a different type of jellyfish.

Inside the volcano, an enormous tank hosts the mermaid show, featuring six mermaids and a further four performers, who were graceful and quite beautiful. But it was their freediving skill in a tank that must be some 30m (100ft) high that was the most impressive feat.

Other tanks in the zone are home to several different species of shark. As with all the ocean life on display, the animals looked healthy and their habitats were clean and well maintained, though I believe that some of the larger species like the belugas and manatees should have had significantly larger aquariums.

Live animal shows
There are several live animal shows on offer at Haichang’s park. I attended the dolphin show at 11.30am, which featured four dolphins and trainers performing to an audience inside of an indoor theatre.
At the orca show, two orcas and their trainers performed. The trainers did not get in the water but controlled the animals by gesture and reward. The orcas performed several leaps and splashed the crowds with their tails, and are also trained to jump out of the water onto the pool’s shallow platform a few times.

The whole event was bookended by a story about a little boy who dreams of his cuddly killer whale toy coming to life to take him on an underwater adventure, shown on a gigantic screen above the outdoor pool. The premise of the story is that we will learn to love sealife more and become “caretakers” of our oceans, but entertainment, not education, is certainly the core driver of these live cetacean shows. The orcas and dolphins looked healthy and neither of the shows lasted more than 20 minutes.

Although the orcas didn’t demonstrate purely ‘natural behaviours’ as SeaWorld now pertains to do, the activities did not cross the line into what could be described as a ‘circus’ performance. Both shows were full to capacity and the thousands-strong audience went wild. However, I can’t help but ask when the attractions industry will formally and unilaterally denounce the building of any new parks with captive killer whales.

More attractions
Over in the Arctic Hall and Sea Mammal Habitat, visitors can see the rest of the park’s animal exhibits, which include sea lions, otters, spotted seals and penguins. Double-to-triple height aquariums allow visitors to view the animals from both above-water and underwater aspects.

For the larger land-based mammals there were concerns. Both the arctic wolves and the two polar bears were pacing repetitively to and fro in small, artificially-lit, indoor glass-front enclosures, often skidding on the concrete floor, with little enrichment or stimulus provided and nothing to help create a naturalistic environment. An animal park that is striving to be world-class should do better for those animals.

At the time of my visit, the WhiteWater-developed Fire Falls spinning river rapids ride was still under construction and the Snow Train that navigates the Arctic Hall mountain was down for maintenance. Intamin’s Steel Dolphin launch coaster, however, was running and offered a fun-filled thrill ride covering more than a kilometre of track around the park, at one point plunging into a shark’s open jaws.

Food, facilities and staff
Ocean Park has a wide food and beverage offering. Included in the park are an array of concession stands and themed restaurants, including the Whale Shark Restaurant, Sandcastle Restaurant, Penguin Restaurant and Dream Dessert House.

There are numerous opportunities to purchase Haichang’s merchandise, much of it inspired by the brand’s “Seven Guardians” – cartoon creatures who appear throughout the park.

The staff were friendly and professional, always on hand to give directions or tell you the next show time.

From the big (like the 309-bedroom on-site resort hotel) to the small (like the gender-neutral toilets and pushchair and wheelchair rental), Ocean Park’s facilities are hard to fault. All in all, especially once the other rides open, this is a well-designed park with an exciting mix of both magical and thrilling experiences. There are more than enough ingredients to make this park a success – even without the ‘star attraction’ of the orcas.
what’s the score?
  • Staff 8/10
  • Cleanliness 10/10
  • Experience 7/10
  • Value for money 10/10
  • Toilets 10/10
  • Overall experience 8/10
Q & A
Taylor Jeffs
President, chief creative officer
Legacy (GGE)
Taylor Jeffs

Have you worked with Haichang before and are you working with them again? Shanghai Haichang Ocean Park was our first collaboration with Haichang, and hopefully won’t be our last. We have a great deal of respect for Haichang’s mission of raising the standard of animal care in China and hope we can help them as they continue on that journey.

What was their brief and what was your role in the project? Our mandate back in 2015 was pretty clear cut: Haichang wanted to create China’s greatest sea life park, both in terms of scope and scale, but also in terms of the latest trends and technologies in habitat design and animal husbandry. The park is located only about half an hour from Shanghai Disneyland, so the bar was very high of course. With around 15 per cent of what was spent there, we needed to create a full-day park that would stand up to the scrutiny of Shanghai’s extremely sophisticated audiences.

What do you like most about the completed park? For me personally, the level of integration in the park is a huge win. Most domestic Chinese theme parks fall into the trap of being “cookie-cutter” in their design – walkway here, ride over there, then rinse and repeat. We strove to integrate everything in order to create a park that is more visually interesting and kinetically thrilling. This park represents a huge leap forward in not only China but all of Asia.

Legacy was behind the US$795m theme park’s development

Read more from this issue of Attractions Management magazine

View contents of Attractions Management 2019 issue 1
A giant tank hosts the park’s mermaid show
A giant tank hosts the park’s mermaid show
The park is expected to attract between 5 and 6 million visitors a year
The park is expected to attract between 5 and 6 million visitors a year
COMPANY PROFILES
Vekoma Rides Manufacturing B.V.

Vekoma Rides has a large variety of coasters and attractions. [more...]
Taylor Made Designs

Founded in 1993, Taylor Made Designs supply corporate clothing and brand-enhancing merchandise to [more...]
Holovis

Holovis is a privately owned company established in 2004 by CEO Stuart Hetherington. [more...]
Painting With Light

By combining lighting, video, scenic and architectural elements, sound and special effects we tell s [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
 

+ More catalogues  
DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

23-26 Aug 2026

Elevate Spa Riviera Maya Edition

The Riviera Maya Edition Kanai, Playa del Carmen, Mexico
29 Sep - 02 Oct 2026

Synergy - The Retreat Show

Pical Resort, Valamar Collection, Porec, Croatia
+ More diary  
LATEST ISSUES
+ View Magazine Archive

Attractions Management

2026 issue 1


View issue contents
View on turning pages
Download PDF
FREE digital subscription
Print subscription

Attractions Management

2025 issue 2


View issue contents
View on turning pages
Download PDF
FREE digital subscription
Print subscription

Attractions Management

2025 issue 1


View issue contents
View on turning pages
Download PDF
FREE digital subscription
Print subscription

Attractions Management

2024 issue 4


View issue contents
View on turning pages
Download PDF
FREE digital subscription
Print subscription

Attractions Management News

06 Apr 2020 issue 153


View on turning pages
Download PDF
View archive
FREE digital subscription
Print subscription

Attractions Handbook

2019


View issue contents
View on turning pages
Download PDF
FREE digital subscription
Print subscription
 
ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
 
ATTRACTIONS MANAGEMENT
ATTRACTIONS MANAGEMENT NEWS
ATTRACTIONS HANDBOOK
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS
ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026
Get Attractions Management digital magazine FREE
Sign up here ▸
Jobs    News   Products   Magazine   Subscribe
Mystery shopper
Shanghai Haichang Ocean Park

A new Ocean Park operated by China’s largest theme park company has opened near Shanghai. Alice Davis paid a visit.

By Alice Davis | Published in Attractions Management 2019 issue 1


The newly opened Shanghai Haichang Ocean Park is located on the coast of the New Pudong District, perched on eastern China’s coastline, about 80 kilometres from the centre of the world’s most populated city. Supplemented by other attractions, Haichang Ocean Park Holdings currently owns and operates nine major marine theme parks across China.

The US$795m Shanghai Haichang Ocean Park is easily accessible from downtown Shanghai by the number 16 Metro Line (CN¥10, US$1.50). From the penultimate station, Lingang Avenue, a shuttle bus reportedly runs. I expected a dedicated park bus yet saw no sign of one; however, you can take the regular 1135 public bus from the Metro station directly to its terminal stop right outside the park (CN¥1, US$0.15). The total journey is approximately 90 minutes from Shanghai, with the Haichang park farther from the city than the nearby Shanghai Disneyland. The area has a ‘middle of nowhere’ feel about it, but seems to be yet another new district that’s being rapidly developed; no doubt the zone will look completely different 18 months from now.

For foreigners, it isn’t possible to book tickets via the park’s website as a Chinese ID card is needed to make an online booking. I had no trouble buying a ticket at the entrance on the morning I arrived (CN¥299, US$45). The park opens at 9.30am, when there were plenty of people milling around but no queues. Chinese citizens who buy online via their WeChat or Alipay app simply scan a QR code to enter the park. I was given a paper ticket and a map of the facility. I was pleased to find it was in English, as were many of the signposts and interactives in the park.

Five zones
This single-gate attraction is only open until 5pm – though this may be a seasonal schedule – and there is more than enough on offer to fill a day. The Qiulian River runs through the centre of the park, with two wide bridges connecting the two sections. Alternatively, visitors can take the colourful cable cars to traverse the site from the volcano-themed Whale Shark Hall at one end of the park to the snow-covered mountain Arctic Hall at the other.

These large structures, alongside some of the more garish themed areas, stand out from a distance, making the theme park exceptionally easy to navigate. Surrounded by water and reasonably well planted with trees, flowers and shrubbery, the landscaping is very pleasant and the park infrastructure is built to a high standard. A monster orange and purple rollercoaster, Steel Dolphin, straddles the river and weaves through a large portion of the site.

The park itself is divided into five different themed zones: Underwater Wonderlands, Ocean Tribes, Polar Town, Mermaid Bay, and Snow Kingdom.

My first stop was the Coral and Jellyfish Aquarium. The ever-popular clownfish are on show here, swimming with other exotic reef-dwelling species, while the next area is a dark mirror-lined room filled with huge cylindrical tanks, each containing a different type of jellyfish.

Inside the volcano, an enormous tank hosts the mermaid show, featuring six mermaids and a further four performers, who were graceful and quite beautiful. But it was their freediving skill in a tank that must be some 30m (100ft) high that was the most impressive feat.

Other tanks in the zone are home to several different species of shark. As with all the ocean life on display, the animals looked healthy and their habitats were clean and well maintained, though I believe that some of the larger species like the belugas and manatees should have had significantly larger aquariums.

Live animal shows
There are several live animal shows on offer at Haichang’s park. I attended the dolphin show at 11.30am, which featured four dolphins and trainers performing to an audience inside of an indoor theatre.
At the orca show, two orcas and their trainers performed. The trainers did not get in the water but controlled the animals by gesture and reward. The orcas performed several leaps and splashed the crowds with their tails, and are also trained to jump out of the water onto the pool’s shallow platform a few times.

The whole event was bookended by a story about a little boy who dreams of his cuddly killer whale toy coming to life to take him on an underwater adventure, shown on a gigantic screen above the outdoor pool. The premise of the story is that we will learn to love sealife more and become “caretakers” of our oceans, but entertainment, not education, is certainly the core driver of these live cetacean shows. The orcas and dolphins looked healthy and neither of the shows lasted more than 20 minutes.

Although the orcas didn’t demonstrate purely ‘natural behaviours’ as SeaWorld now pertains to do, the activities did not cross the line into what could be described as a ‘circus’ performance. Both shows were full to capacity and the thousands-strong audience went wild. However, I can’t help but ask when the attractions industry will formally and unilaterally denounce the building of any new parks with captive killer whales.

More attractions
Over in the Arctic Hall and Sea Mammal Habitat, visitors can see the rest of the park’s animal exhibits, which include sea lions, otters, spotted seals and penguins. Double-to-triple height aquariums allow visitors to view the animals from both above-water and underwater aspects.

For the larger land-based mammals there were concerns. Both the arctic wolves and the two polar bears were pacing repetitively to and fro in small, artificially-lit, indoor glass-front enclosures, often skidding on the concrete floor, with little enrichment or stimulus provided and nothing to help create a naturalistic environment. An animal park that is striving to be world-class should do better for those animals.

At the time of my visit, the WhiteWater-developed Fire Falls spinning river rapids ride was still under construction and the Snow Train that navigates the Arctic Hall mountain was down for maintenance. Intamin’s Steel Dolphin launch coaster, however, was running and offered a fun-filled thrill ride covering more than a kilometre of track around the park, at one point plunging into a shark’s open jaws.

Food, facilities and staff
Ocean Park has a wide food and beverage offering. Included in the park are an array of concession stands and themed restaurants, including the Whale Shark Restaurant, Sandcastle Restaurant, Penguin Restaurant and Dream Dessert House.

There are numerous opportunities to purchase Haichang’s merchandise, much of it inspired by the brand’s “Seven Guardians” – cartoon creatures who appear throughout the park.

The staff were friendly and professional, always on hand to give directions or tell you the next show time.

From the big (like the 309-bedroom on-site resort hotel) to the small (like the gender-neutral toilets and pushchair and wheelchair rental), Ocean Park’s facilities are hard to fault. All in all, especially once the other rides open, this is a well-designed park with an exciting mix of both magical and thrilling experiences. There are more than enough ingredients to make this park a success – even without the ‘star attraction’ of the orcas.
what’s the score?
  • Staff 8/10
  • Cleanliness 10/10
  • Experience 7/10
  • Value for money 10/10
  • Toilets 10/10
  • Overall experience 8/10
Q & A
Taylor Jeffs
President, chief creative officer
Legacy (GGE)
Taylor Jeffs

Have you worked with Haichang before and are you working with them again? Shanghai Haichang Ocean Park was our first collaboration with Haichang, and hopefully won’t be our last. We have a great deal of respect for Haichang’s mission of raising the standard of animal care in China and hope we can help them as they continue on that journey.

What was their brief and what was your role in the project? Our mandate back in 2015 was pretty clear cut: Haichang wanted to create China’s greatest sea life park, both in terms of scope and scale, but also in terms of the latest trends and technologies in habitat design and animal husbandry. The park is located only about half an hour from Shanghai Disneyland, so the bar was very high of course. With around 15 per cent of what was spent there, we needed to create a full-day park that would stand up to the scrutiny of Shanghai’s extremely sophisticated audiences.

What do you like most about the completed park? For me personally, the level of integration in the park is a huge win. Most domestic Chinese theme parks fall into the trap of being “cookie-cutter” in their design – walkway here, ride over there, then rinse and repeat. We strove to integrate everything in order to create a park that is more visually interesting and kinetically thrilling. This park represents a huge leap forward in not only China but all of Asia.

Legacy was behind the US$795m theme park’s development

Read more from this issue of Attractions Management magazine

View contents of Attractions Management 2019 issue 1
A giant tank hosts the park’s mermaid show
A giant tank hosts the park’s mermaid show
The park is expected to attract between 5 and 6 million visitors a year
The park is expected to attract between 5 and 6 million visitors a year
LATEST NEWS
OMA completes New Museum transformation with landmark expansion and Oberon restaurant
OMA has completed a major transformation of New York's New Museum, creating a larger cultural campus that combines expanded exhibition spaces with learning, performance, hospitality and public programming.
David Rockwell creates immersive magic destination, The Hand and The Eye
A US$50 million (£44.2 million, €51.2 million) transformation of Chicago's historic McCormick Mansion has created a new destination that combines live magic, immersive theatre, dining and private membership under one roof.
Montana Heritage Center opens with immersive exhibits and US$107 million investment
The Montana Historical Society has officially celebrated the opening of its new Montana Heritage Center, a US$107 million (£79 million, €92 million) destination that combines immersive storytelling with cutting-edge audiovisual technology to bring the sta
Universal launches new theme park model with Kids Resort
Universal Destinations and Experiences has launched a new regional theme park model with the opening of Universal Kids Resort in Frisco, Texas.
San Antonio Zoo reports $283 million economic impact as expansion plans progress
San Antonio Zoo has reported a US$283 million economic impact for 2025, following a decade- long transformation programme that has seen almost US$200 million invested into the Texas attraction.
Great Barrier Reef attraction set for AU$180 million reinvention
Plans for the AU$180 million redevelopment of Reef HQ Aquarium in Townsville, Australia, are progressing, with the project set to transform the attraction into a global centre for reef education and conservation.
Mubadala makes €1 billion bid for Pierre and Vacances
Abu Dhabi-based investment firm Mubadala Capital has made a binding, fully financed €1 billion offer to acquire Pierre and Vacances SA, the European holiday resort operator behind the continental European Center Parcs business.
Disney confirms US$30 billion investment programme as it highlights its economic impact
Disney has reaffirmed its commitment to investing US$30 billion in its US parks and cruise business by 2033, using new America250 celebrations to underline the role its attractions play in supporting jobs, tourism and economic growth.
Expo 2030 Riyadh will create a permanent global destination
Expo 2030 Riyadh is being planned as a permanent visitor destination, with organisers confirming the six-million-square-metre site will become a Global Village after the event closes.
Australian waterpark acquisition creates new leisure attractions group
The owner of one of Australia's best-known waterparks has acquired a major competitor, creating a new attractions business spanning two of the country's largest visitor destinations.
London Museum reveals 2026 opening date for new Smithfield home
The London Museum’s new site will open in Smithfield, East London, on 28 November 2026.
Toverland unveils €98m expansion plan as park prepares to launch resort development
The Toverland theme park in the Netherlands has announced a €98m expansion programme that will add a resort, new attractions and staff facilities as it pursues plans to become a multi- day destination.
+ More news   
 
COMPANY PROFILES
Vekoma Rides Manufacturing B.V.

Vekoma Rides has a large variety of coasters and attractions. [more...]
Taylor Made Designs

Founded in 1993, Taylor Made Designs supply corporate clothing and brand-enhancing merchandise to [more...]
Holovis

Holovis is a privately owned company established in 2004 by CEO Stuart Hetherington. [more...]
Painting With Light

By combining lighting, video, scenic and architectural elements, sound and special effects we tell s [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
+ More catalogues  
DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

23-26 Aug 2026

Elevate Spa Riviera Maya Edition

The Riviera Maya Edition Kanai, Playa del Carmen, Mexico
29 Sep - 02 Oct 2026

Synergy - The Retreat Show

Pical Resort, Valamar Collection, Porec, Croatia
+ More diary  
 


ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
LEISURE MEDIA MAGAZINES
LEISURE MEDIA HANDBOOKS
LEISURE MEDIA WEBSITES
LEISURE MEDIA PRODUCT SEARCH
ATTRACTIONS MANAGEMENT NEWS
ATTRACTIONS HANDBOOK
PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTIONS