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NEWS
AU$500m cultural theme park in Australia hits several stumbling blocks en-route to development
POSTED 02 Jul 2015 . BY Tom Anstey
The development will feature 12 main sections
Plans for an AU$500m (US$466m, €348.4m, £276.6m) Chinese Cultural Theme Park north of Sydney, Australia, face major hurdles after a number of incidents have put the proposed attraction’s owners and key shareholders under scrutiny.

Most recently, the New South Wales Department of Planning and Environment reprimanded the developers of Chappypie China Time theme park for using the Department's official logo in its promotional material. Australia China Theme Park – the company behind the multi-million dollar development – has been running a promotion which offers an Australian visa in exchange for a AU$1m (US$771,000, €689,000, £489,000) investment. On 26 June, the department demanded the company remove its logo from all promotional material related to this promotion, but is yet to receive a response. In a statement, the department said it had never authorised use of its logo and insisted that the matter is being taken “very seriously.”

Concerns were also recently raised by government members about the financial backers of the development, with an investigation now underway into claims that Wyong Shire mayor Doug Eaton failed to declare his wife's financial interests in the theme park. Eaton has since admitted his wife was listed as a shareholder but insisted there was no financial benefit from the arrangement.

In May, conditional approval was granted for the attraction, but under re-zoning and height restrictions, with the department also challenging predicted job figures and tourist numbers. The key issue – a request to rezone the site – has been deemed unnecessary, while the department said the proposal must include a clause which restricts the site to be developed as a cultural theme park.

In its summary, the department said there was no breakdown of what jobs would be created, no estimate of tourist numbers and no study of parking requirements.

Tentatively set to open in late 2016 in Wyong, 90m (145km) north of Sydney, the development will feature 12 main sections — including the Meridian Gate, thanksgiving Temple, Zheng He’s Treasure Ship, an arts and crafts workshop, Spring Festival Square and Panda Paradise.

It is hoped that Chappypie China Time would attract Chinese visitors in a similar way to American tourists travelling to EuroDisney – a familiar cultural icon in a new exotic location.

Also touted for the park across the 12 zones is a 4D cinema, waxworks museum, a giant ship, a full-size replica of Beijing's Forbidden City and a nine-storey temple housing a giant Buddha.
RELATED STORIES
  Australia's AU$500bn Chinese cultural theme park plans move forward


Details on the first phase of a AU$500m (US$466m, €348.4m, £276.6m) Chinese Cultural Theme Park north of Sydney, Australia, have been released, with the developers purchasing a 15-hectare (150,000sq m) site from Wyong Council for AU$10m (US$9.3m, €6.9m, £5.5m).
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NEWS
AU$500m cultural theme park in Australia hits several stumbling blocks en-route to development
POSTED 02 Jul 2015 . BY Tom Anstey
The development will feature 12 main sections
Plans for an AU$500m (US$466m, €348.4m, £276.6m) Chinese Cultural Theme Park north of Sydney, Australia, face major hurdles after a number of incidents have put the proposed attraction’s owners and key shareholders under scrutiny.

Most recently, the New South Wales Department of Planning and Environment reprimanded the developers of Chappypie China Time theme park for using the Department's official logo in its promotional material. Australia China Theme Park – the company behind the multi-million dollar development – has been running a promotion which offers an Australian visa in exchange for a AU$1m (US$771,000, €689,000, £489,000) investment. On 26 June, the department demanded the company remove its logo from all promotional material related to this promotion, but is yet to receive a response. In a statement, the department said it had never authorised use of its logo and insisted that the matter is being taken “very seriously.”

Concerns were also recently raised by government members about the financial backers of the development, with an investigation now underway into claims that Wyong Shire mayor Doug Eaton failed to declare his wife's financial interests in the theme park. Eaton has since admitted his wife was listed as a shareholder but insisted there was no financial benefit from the arrangement.

In May, conditional approval was granted for the attraction, but under re-zoning and height restrictions, with the department also challenging predicted job figures and tourist numbers. The key issue – a request to rezone the site – has been deemed unnecessary, while the department said the proposal must include a clause which restricts the site to be developed as a cultural theme park.

In its summary, the department said there was no breakdown of what jobs would be created, no estimate of tourist numbers and no study of parking requirements.

Tentatively set to open in late 2016 in Wyong, 90m (145km) north of Sydney, the development will feature 12 main sections — including the Meridian Gate, thanksgiving Temple, Zheng He’s Treasure Ship, an arts and crafts workshop, Spring Festival Square and Panda Paradise.

It is hoped that Chappypie China Time would attract Chinese visitors in a similar way to American tourists travelling to EuroDisney – a familiar cultural icon in a new exotic location.

Also touted for the park across the 12 zones is a 4D cinema, waxworks museum, a giant ship, a full-size replica of Beijing's Forbidden City and a nine-storey temple housing a giant Buddha.
RELATED STORIES
Australia's AU$500bn Chinese cultural theme park plans move forward


Details on the first phase of a AU$500m (US$466m, €348.4m, £276.6m) Chinese Cultural Theme Park north of Sydney, Australia, have been released, with the developers purchasing a 15-hectare (150,000sq m) site from Wyong Council for AU$10m (US$9.3m, €6.9m, £5.5m).
MORE NEWS
Bob Rogers hands BRC to long-serving leadership team
Experience design company, BRC Imagination Arts, has completed a transition that sees founder Bob Rogers pass ownership of the business to four long-serving senior executives, while remaining actively involved with the company.
Rainer Maelzer joins Therme Group as chief entertainment officer
Rainer Maelzer, an experiential entertainment innovator, has been appointed chief entertainment officer by Therme Group.
Movie Park Germany reveals new Paramount attraction as part of its 30th anniversary celebrations
Movie Park Germany has opened a new Paramount Pictures-themed attraction as part of its 30th anniversary celebrations, using immersive storytelling and adaptive reuse to reinforce the park’s longstanding “Hollywood in Germany” positioning.
Therme Manchester reveals 90:90 strategy – 90 per cent of the UK population within a 90-minute drive of a Therme
Therme Manchester’s 28-acre development, which will include interconnected glass pavilions that measure 65,000sq m, will be the largest bathing and wellbeing attraction in the world once complete, according to prof David Russell, CEO of Therme UK. 
Efteling expands family offer with new Hooghmoed drop tower
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COMPANY PROFILES
Sally Corporation

Our services include: Dark ride design & build; Redevelopment of existing attractions; High-quality [more...]
Simworx Ltd

The company was initially established in 1997. Terry Monkton and Andrew Roberts are the key stakeh [more...]
Vekoma Rides Manufacturing B.V.

Vekoma Rides has a large variety of coasters and attractions. [more...]
Alterface

Alterface’s Creative Division team is seasoned in concept and ride development, as well as storyte [more...]
+ More profiles  
FEATURED SUPPLIER

Iconic Liverpool attraction opens door to new operators
An opportunity to reimagine one of the UK’s most recognisable towers has been formally opened by Rivington Hark, as St Johns Beacon invites operators and partners to shape its next phase. [more...]
CATALOGUE GALLERY
+ More catalogues  
DIRECTORY
+ More directory  
DIARY

 

09-11 Jun 2026

World Sauna Forum 2026

Savutuvan Apaja, Haapaniemi, Finland
23-26 Aug 2026

Elevate Spa Riviera Maya Edition

The Riviera Maya Edition Kanai, Playa del Carmen, Mexico
+ More diary  
 


ADVERTISE . CONTACT US

Leisure Media
Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385

©Cybertrek 2026

ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
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