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
Get Attractions Management digital magazine FREE
Sign up here ▸
Jobs   News   Features   Products   Company profilesProfiles   Magazine   Handbook   Advertise    Subscribe  
Mystery shopper
Catching butterflies

Dollywood has unveiled Wildwood Grove, its largest expansion ever. Jane Kitchen visits the US theme park to see what it’s all about...

By Jane Kitchen | Published in Attractions Management 2019 issue 3


Pigeon Forge, Tennessee – a once small town nestled in the US’s Smoky Mountains – is a family-friendly leisure destination in and of itself. Its main street feels like a mini-Las Vegas for families – bright lights and signs advertising everything from bumper cars to treetop adventures and dinner theatres strangely themed around family feuds.

The town itself has about 6,200 permanent residents, but visitors boost the daily population to more than 50,000 – a fact that made itself abundantly clear in the amount of car traffic on the town’s roads.

A gateway city to the nearby Smoky Mountains National Park, the area has exploded in recent years, due in large part to the popularity of Dollywood – a theme park named after country singer Dolly Parton. It’s wholesome American fun – the kind many families return to every year – and is particularly attractive to the millions of Americans who are within a day’s drive.

The Dollywood effect
Dollywood, which first opened in 1986, and hosts around 2.5m visitors annually, is Tennessee’s number one ticketed attraction, so it’s a big deal when a park of this nature opens its biggest expansion yet.

At US$37m, Wildwood Grove represents Dollywood’s largest-ever investment and is the first new area to be added to the park in more than a decade. The expansion has been inspired by Parton’s childhood memories of growing up in the Smoky Mountains of Tennessee and features 11 new family-friendly experiences themed around wildlife and nature.

“When I was a little girl growing up in the hills of the Smoky Mountains, I’d often let my imagination just run away — something I still do now — dreaming these big dreams about what it’d be like to venture off with a family of bears into the woods or how fun it would be to hitch a ride with the butterflies and dragonflies,” says Parton. “All us kids would splash and play in the creeks and ponds around home and have these daydreams about the world around us, and that’s what’s so special about Wildwood Grove. We’ve been able to create a new area to allow families to experience those dreams we had when we were little.”

The area neatly attaches to the existing park, and its themes slot in nicely with other Smoky Mountain-themed areas focusing on mining adventures and eagle rehabilitation. Park officials call it “the new standard for Dollywood,” and president Craig Ross said the expansion will help make room for guests as the park continues to set new attendance records.

Magical design
Nearly US$1m has been invested in Wildwood Grove’s landscaping, with more than 400 trees and 2,300 shrubs creating a natural atmosphere, including plants like butterfly bushes, echinacea and black-eyed Susans that attract butterflies. The landscaping still feels quite new, but will become lusher in just a few seasons. The theming is solid, with details like butterfly-shaped pretzels and a Wildwood Creek area, which offers pop jets and splashing pools, as well as the central Wildwood Tree, which includes 650 lighted butterflies that come to life each evening. Music is central to Dolly Parton and to Dollywood, with areas set aside for children to play “instruments” and piped in regional fiddle music helping to lift the atmosphere.

Rides are designed for the whole family, with a nice range of tame rides for the littlest children, including Black Bear Trail, a Metallbau Emmeln Pony Trek ride, and the Frogs & Fireflies, a hopping ride that races around a lily pad from Zamperla Jump Around. Stepping it up a notch, the Treetop Tower from Zamperla Samba Tower sits riders in giant acorns that spin around an oak tree before gently drifting back down.

The visitor experience
I visited with my husband and two children, aged 12 and 13. While Wildwood Grove offers plenty for little kids, my two older ones didn’t feel out of place and still had plenty to ride. It’s a nice detail and will allow families with children that span different age ranges to comfortably spend a chunk of time at Wildwood Grove.

The kids first went for the Great Tree Swing, a ‘leaf boat’-themed version of Zamperla’s Galleon. As someone who suffers from motion sickness, this is my worst kind of nightmare, so they went on it alone, and I was able to witness the broad range of ages all enjoying the up-and-down thrills. Next, they took on the Mad Mockingbird – from Larson Flying Scooter, and themed around Tennessee’s state bird – which sees guests flying in a high-speed circle around a tall tree. This can be a gentle ride for younger children or risk-averse adults but can be amped up a notch, as the birds can be spun around different directions by moving a sail.

The area’s signature ride, the Dragonflier, is Wildwood Grove’s highlight. Billed as a family ride, the Vekoma 453m (1,486ft) suspended coaster delivers enough thrills for older kids and adults, and is a great introduction for younger children or the rollercoaster averse. My 12-year-old daughter is a rollercoaster junkie who wanted nothing more than to ride the Wild Eagle, a wing coaster that soars 21 stories above the park, which opened in 2012. But she was also excited about the Dragonflier and willing to wait in the long lines to try it.

On a sweltering day, the high-powered fans in the waiting area were a welcome necessity, and the fiddle music and bird sounds playing helped set the stage and make the time go by a bit faster. But the Dragonflier was where the only hitch in our visit occurred: after waiting 45 minutes, we reached the front of the line, only to find the ride had to be suspended for maintenance. No one could give us an idea of how long it would take or even if the Dragonflier would reopen that evening, but we were told we were welcome to continue waiting or check back later. It seems to me that there should be something park employees are empowered to do in this situation, particularly for guests in the very front who’d already waited in long lines – a card for the fast-pass lane on return, for instance. There were lots of disappointed faces as people slowly gave up and peeled away, having wasted close to an hour of their park time in a line to nowhere.

Luckily, the ride did open again, and when we returned at the end of the day we were able to try it out. It took quite a long time to load – each harness was checked by a cheery employee who came around and said “Hands in the air! Now give me all your money!” – and there was enough time in those few minutes for my son and I to both feel a few butterflies in our stomachs. As the ride crept up the first steep hill and we hung suspended, we exchanged a quick nervous look, and then we shot down all at once, sweeping underground for a few seconds, before being flung out from one side to the other as we dipped and darted, skimming over the ground and up and down again, much like the chaotic flight of a dragonfly. The ride was mercifully short, but packed a real punch – my legs were wobbly as I walked away. As for my rollercoaster-averse son? He hated it, of course. But he also loved it – and isn’t that the perfect first rollercoaster experience?

what’s the score?
  • Staff - 7/10
  • Cleanliness - 8/10
  • Experience - 8/10
  • Value for money - 9/10
  • Toilets - 8/10
  • Overall experience - 8/10
The Vekoma-designed Dragonflier mimics the flight of a Smoky Mountain dragonfly
The Vekoma-designed Dragonflier mimics the flight of a Smoky Mountain dragonfly
The Vekoma-designed Dragonflier mimics the flight of a Smoky Mountain dragonfly
Accompanied by her husband and two children, Attractions Management’s Jane Kitchen tried out the new expansion
Treetop Tower whirls riders through the air
The Black Bear Trail takes riders through the beautiful backwoods
Dolly Parton was on-hand for the launch of Wildwood Grove in May 2019 Credit: photo: AFF-PA Images
COMPANY PROFILES
IDEATTACK

IDEATTACK is a full-service planning and design company with headquarters in Los Angeles. [more...]
Simworx Ltd

The company was initially established in 1997. Terry Monkton and Andrew Roberts are the key stakeh [more...]
Alterface

Alterface’s Creative Division team is seasoned in concept and ride development, as well as storyte [more...]
Red Raion

Founded in 2014, Red Raion is the CGI studio for media-based attractions. [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
 

+ More catalogues  
DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

08-08 May 2024

Hospitality Design Conference

Hotel Melià , Milano , Italy
10-12 May 2024

Asia Pool & Spa Expo

China Import & Export Fair Complex, Guangzhou, China
+ More diary  
LATEST ISSUES
+ View Magazine Archive

Attractions Management

2024 issue 1


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

Attractions Management

2023 issue 4


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

Attractions Management

2023 issue 3


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

Attractions Management

2023 issue 2


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 2024
Get Attractions Management digital magazine FREE
Sign up here ▸
Jobs    News   Products   Magazine   Subscribe
Mystery shopper
Catching butterflies

Dollywood has unveiled Wildwood Grove, its largest expansion ever. Jane Kitchen visits the US theme park to see what it’s all about...

By Jane Kitchen | Published in Attractions Management 2019 issue 3


Pigeon Forge, Tennessee – a once small town nestled in the US’s Smoky Mountains – is a family-friendly leisure destination in and of itself. Its main street feels like a mini-Las Vegas for families – bright lights and signs advertising everything from bumper cars to treetop adventures and dinner theatres strangely themed around family feuds.

The town itself has about 6,200 permanent residents, but visitors boost the daily population to more than 50,000 – a fact that made itself abundantly clear in the amount of car traffic on the town’s roads.

A gateway city to the nearby Smoky Mountains National Park, the area has exploded in recent years, due in large part to the popularity of Dollywood – a theme park named after country singer Dolly Parton. It’s wholesome American fun – the kind many families return to every year – and is particularly attractive to the millions of Americans who are within a day’s drive.

The Dollywood effect
Dollywood, which first opened in 1986, and hosts around 2.5m visitors annually, is Tennessee’s number one ticketed attraction, so it’s a big deal when a park of this nature opens its biggest expansion yet.

At US$37m, Wildwood Grove represents Dollywood’s largest-ever investment and is the first new area to be added to the park in more than a decade. The expansion has been inspired by Parton’s childhood memories of growing up in the Smoky Mountains of Tennessee and features 11 new family-friendly experiences themed around wildlife and nature.

“When I was a little girl growing up in the hills of the Smoky Mountains, I’d often let my imagination just run away — something I still do now — dreaming these big dreams about what it’d be like to venture off with a family of bears into the woods or how fun it would be to hitch a ride with the butterflies and dragonflies,” says Parton. “All us kids would splash and play in the creeks and ponds around home and have these daydreams about the world around us, and that’s what’s so special about Wildwood Grove. We’ve been able to create a new area to allow families to experience those dreams we had when we were little.”

The area neatly attaches to the existing park, and its themes slot in nicely with other Smoky Mountain-themed areas focusing on mining adventures and eagle rehabilitation. Park officials call it “the new standard for Dollywood,” and president Craig Ross said the expansion will help make room for guests as the park continues to set new attendance records.

Magical design
Nearly US$1m has been invested in Wildwood Grove’s landscaping, with more than 400 trees and 2,300 shrubs creating a natural atmosphere, including plants like butterfly bushes, echinacea and black-eyed Susans that attract butterflies. The landscaping still feels quite new, but will become lusher in just a few seasons. The theming is solid, with details like butterfly-shaped pretzels and a Wildwood Creek area, which offers pop jets and splashing pools, as well as the central Wildwood Tree, which includes 650 lighted butterflies that come to life each evening. Music is central to Dolly Parton and to Dollywood, with areas set aside for children to play “instruments” and piped in regional fiddle music helping to lift the atmosphere.

Rides are designed for the whole family, with a nice range of tame rides for the littlest children, including Black Bear Trail, a Metallbau Emmeln Pony Trek ride, and the Frogs & Fireflies, a hopping ride that races around a lily pad from Zamperla Jump Around. Stepping it up a notch, the Treetop Tower from Zamperla Samba Tower sits riders in giant acorns that spin around an oak tree before gently drifting back down.

The visitor experience
I visited with my husband and two children, aged 12 and 13. While Wildwood Grove offers plenty for little kids, my two older ones didn’t feel out of place and still had plenty to ride. It’s a nice detail and will allow families with children that span different age ranges to comfortably spend a chunk of time at Wildwood Grove.

The kids first went for the Great Tree Swing, a ‘leaf boat’-themed version of Zamperla’s Galleon. As someone who suffers from motion sickness, this is my worst kind of nightmare, so they went on it alone, and I was able to witness the broad range of ages all enjoying the up-and-down thrills. Next, they took on the Mad Mockingbird – from Larson Flying Scooter, and themed around Tennessee’s state bird – which sees guests flying in a high-speed circle around a tall tree. This can be a gentle ride for younger children or risk-averse adults but can be amped up a notch, as the birds can be spun around different directions by moving a sail.

The area’s signature ride, the Dragonflier, is Wildwood Grove’s highlight. Billed as a family ride, the Vekoma 453m (1,486ft) suspended coaster delivers enough thrills for older kids and adults, and is a great introduction for younger children or the rollercoaster averse. My 12-year-old daughter is a rollercoaster junkie who wanted nothing more than to ride the Wild Eagle, a wing coaster that soars 21 stories above the park, which opened in 2012. But she was also excited about the Dragonflier and willing to wait in the long lines to try it.

On a sweltering day, the high-powered fans in the waiting area were a welcome necessity, and the fiddle music and bird sounds playing helped set the stage and make the time go by a bit faster. But the Dragonflier was where the only hitch in our visit occurred: after waiting 45 minutes, we reached the front of the line, only to find the ride had to be suspended for maintenance. No one could give us an idea of how long it would take or even if the Dragonflier would reopen that evening, but we were told we were welcome to continue waiting or check back later. It seems to me that there should be something park employees are empowered to do in this situation, particularly for guests in the very front who’d already waited in long lines – a card for the fast-pass lane on return, for instance. There were lots of disappointed faces as people slowly gave up and peeled away, having wasted close to an hour of their park time in a line to nowhere.

Luckily, the ride did open again, and when we returned at the end of the day we were able to try it out. It took quite a long time to load – each harness was checked by a cheery employee who came around and said “Hands in the air! Now give me all your money!” – and there was enough time in those few minutes for my son and I to both feel a few butterflies in our stomachs. As the ride crept up the first steep hill and we hung suspended, we exchanged a quick nervous look, and then we shot down all at once, sweeping underground for a few seconds, before being flung out from one side to the other as we dipped and darted, skimming over the ground and up and down again, much like the chaotic flight of a dragonfly. The ride was mercifully short, but packed a real punch – my legs were wobbly as I walked away. As for my rollercoaster-averse son? He hated it, of course. But he also loved it – and isn’t that the perfect first rollercoaster experience?

what’s the score?
  • Staff - 7/10
  • Cleanliness - 8/10
  • Experience - 8/10
  • Value for money - 9/10
  • Toilets - 8/10
  • Overall experience - 8/10
The Vekoma-designed Dragonflier mimics the flight of a Smoky Mountain dragonfly
The Vekoma-designed Dragonflier mimics the flight of a Smoky Mountain dragonfly
The Vekoma-designed Dragonflier mimics the flight of a Smoky Mountain dragonfly
Accompanied by her husband and two children, Attractions Management’s Jane Kitchen tried out the new expansion
Treetop Tower whirls riders through the air
The Black Bear Trail takes riders through the beautiful backwoods
Dolly Parton was on-hand for the launch of Wildwood Grove in May 2019 Credit: photo: AFF-PA Images
LATEST NEWS
The Everyday Heritage initiative celebrates and preserves working class histories
Off the back of the success of the first round of Everyday Heritage Grants in 2022, Historic England is funding 56 creative projects that honour the heritage of working-class England.
Universal announces long-awaited details of its Epic Universe, set to open in 2025
Universal has revealed it will be adding new Harry Potter attractions, alongside Super Nintendo and How to Train Your Dragon worlds to its Florida resort.
Heartbreak for Swedish theme park, Liseberg, as fire breaks out
A fire has destroyed part of the new water world, Oceana, at Liseberg in Sweden, and a construction worker has been reported missing.
Museum director apologises after comparing the city of Florence to a sex worker
Museum director Cecilie Hollberg has come under fire for comparing the city to a sex worker due to uncontrolled mass tourism.
Populous reveals plans for major e-sports arena in Saudi Arabia
Populous have unveiled their plans for a state-of-the-art e-sports arena, designed to stand as a central landmark in Qiddaya City’s gaming and e-sports district, Saudi Arabia.
Raby Castle reveals ambitious plans to become a major visitor destination
Raby Castle, known as one of the finest medieval fortifications in England, is nearing the end of an ambitious two-year renovation project.
Wake The Tiger launches new 1,000sq m expansion
Wake the Tiger, the Bristol-based immersive art experience, is set to open its 1,000sq m expansion on Friday 2 February.
Merlin teams up with Hasbro and Lego to create Peppa Pig experiences
Merlin Entertainments, the LEGO Group and Hasbro have teamed up to create Peppa Pig experiences.
Tate Modern and Frame collaborate on a mind/body experience
London boutique operator, Frame, has teamed up with the Tate Modern to offer two yin and sound yoga classes, following by a tour of the art gallery.
Elvis Presley Live is rolling out globally
Immersive entertainment specialists, Layered Reality, is creating a tribute to Elvis Presley featuring a concert experience with a life-sized digital Elvis.
Carmel Lewis takes top spot at BRC
Carmel Lewis has been appointed president at global experiential planning and design firm, BRC Imagination Arts, heralding a new era for the company.
Perth Museum to launch at Easter with rare Jacobite objects
Opening over Easter weekend in March 2024 after a £26.5m redevelopment project, Perth Museum will tell the story of Perth – Scotland’s first capital.
+ More news   
 
COMPANY PROFILES
IDEATTACK

IDEATTACK is a full-service planning and design company with headquarters in Los Angeles. [more...]
Simworx Ltd

The company was initially established in 1997. Terry Monkton and Andrew Roberts are the key stakeh [more...]
Alterface

Alterface’s Creative Division team is seasoned in concept and ride development, as well as storyte [more...]
Red Raion

Founded in 2014, Red Raion is the CGI studio for media-based attractions. [more...]
+ More profiles  
CATALOGUE GALLERY
+ More catalogues  
DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

08-08 May 2024

Hospitality Design Conference

Hotel Melià , Milano , Italy
10-12 May 2024

Asia Pool & Spa Expo

China Import & Export Fair Complex, Guangzhou, China
+ More diary  
 


ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2024

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