Exclusive: Australian market recovering, says Village Roadshow COO as operator addresses safety concerns
POSTED 12 Dec 2017 . BY Tom Anstey
Village Roadshow's most recent investment is the AU$30m DC Rivals HyperCoaster Credit: Village Roadshow
Following a year of turmoil for Australia’s theme park sector, the Gold Coast market is finally starting to show signs of recovery, according to Village Roadshow Theme Parks COO Bob White.
In the wake of the Dreamworld tragedy in November 2016 – which claimed four lives when two rafts collided on the Ardent-operated park’s Thunder River rapids ride – a ripple effect was felt across the Australian theme park market, with visitor numbers and revenues down significantly across the board.
Financial results for Village Roadshow, which operates the Movie World, Wet'n'Wild, and Sea World parks, showed profits falling from AU$50.9m (US$38.5m, €32.7m, £28.9m) in 2016 to AU$23.6m (US$17.9m, €15.2m, £13.4m) in 2017. For the year, company profits are down by about 30 per cent, however, White said there are signs of improvement.
“In September we finally got back to being essentially flat, so there’s been significant recovery since that happened,” said White, speaking exclusively to AM2.
“Public safety awareness is the issue here and the work isn’t done. We have to keep working at it to make sure that people understand they’re safe on a ride. On top of that, we’re making major investments in our parks.”
Despite the fact the tragedy did not take place at a Village Roadshow park, media scrutiny on ride incidents in Australia dramatically increased to include less significant ride stoppages.
As a result, Village Roadshow created its own ride safety videos explaining why, for example, a rollercoaster might suddenly stop and why that is a safe procedure for visitors.
“We’re an overwhelmingly safe industry,” said White. “The traditional media and also some of the social media vehicles have their own interests. Context is so important and it has to be a context people understand.
“The big lesson we learned is you have to be direct and you have to be timely. You can’t wait around, do a statement and hope the problem goes away because, in the age of social media, it’s not really going to cut it.”
Included in its investment programme this year, Village Roadshow debuted the DC Rivals HyperCoaster at Movie World – a AU$30m (US$22.7m, €19.3m, £17m) purchase that opened to the public in September.
At 1,400m (4,593 ft) long and 61.6 m (202 ft) high, the Mack-manufactured ride reaches speeds of up to 115.1 kilometres per hour (71.5 mph), making it the longest, fastest and tallest hypercoaster in the Southern Hemisphere. Further investments are on the horizon.
“We know the theme park business so it’s a combination of imagining a ride we think will have an impact in the market and getting it at the right price point that makes sense for the business,” said White.
“The fundamental growth of the economy, the growth in Australia and the growth in the international marketplace around Australia tells us that this was a blip for sure.
“As long as we continue to do safe rides that are good experiences, and are well branded, then we’re going to do really well in the future.”
Industrial manslaughter laws to be introduced following Dreamworld tragedy POSTED 24 Aug 2017. BY Tom Anstey Queensland’s state government is set introduce industrial manslaughter laws, with safety
around theme park rides to also be tightened, following the deaths of four people at
Dreamworld last year.
Ardent revenue plummets in wake of DreamWorld tragedy POSTED 09 Feb 2017. BY Tom Anstey Ardent Leisure has seen revenue fall by more than half following a fatal accident at its
Dreamworld theme park on Australia’s Gold Coast last year.
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Exclusive: Australian market recovering, says Village Roadshow COO as operator addresses safety concerns
POSTED 12 Dec 2017 . BY Tom Anstey
Village Roadshow's most recent investment is the AU$30m DC Rivals HyperCoaster Credit: Village Roadshow
Following a year of turmoil for Australia’s theme park sector, the Gold Coast market is finally starting to show signs of recovery, according to Village Roadshow Theme Parks COO Bob White.
In the wake of the Dreamworld tragedy in November 2016 – which claimed four lives when two rafts collided on the Ardent-operated park’s Thunder River rapids ride – a ripple effect was felt across the Australian theme park market, with visitor numbers and revenues down significantly across the board.
Financial results for Village Roadshow, which operates the Movie World, Wet'n'Wild, and Sea World parks, showed profits falling from AU$50.9m (US$38.5m, €32.7m, £28.9m) in 2016 to AU$23.6m (US$17.9m, €15.2m, £13.4m) in 2017. For the year, company profits are down by about 30 per cent, however, White said there are signs of improvement.
“In September we finally got back to being essentially flat, so there’s been significant recovery since that happened,” said White, speaking exclusively to AM2.
“Public safety awareness is the issue here and the work isn’t done. We have to keep working at it to make sure that people understand they’re safe on a ride. On top of that, we’re making major investments in our parks.”
Despite the fact the tragedy did not take place at a Village Roadshow park, media scrutiny on ride incidents in Australia dramatically increased to include less significant ride stoppages.
As a result, Village Roadshow created its own ride safety videos explaining why, for example, a rollercoaster might suddenly stop and why that is a safe procedure for visitors.
“We’re an overwhelmingly safe industry,” said White. “The traditional media and also some of the social media vehicles have their own interests. Context is so important and it has to be a context people understand.
“The big lesson we learned is you have to be direct and you have to be timely. You can’t wait around, do a statement and hope the problem goes away because, in the age of social media, it’s not really going to cut it.”
Included in its investment programme this year, Village Roadshow debuted the DC Rivals HyperCoaster at Movie World – a AU$30m (US$22.7m, €19.3m, £17m) purchase that opened to the public in September.
At 1,400m (4,593 ft) long and 61.6 m (202 ft) high, the Mack-manufactured ride reaches speeds of up to 115.1 kilometres per hour (71.5 mph), making it the longest, fastest and tallest hypercoaster in the Southern Hemisphere. Further investments are on the horizon.
“We know the theme park business so it’s a combination of imagining a ride we think will have an impact in the market and getting it at the right price point that makes sense for the business,” said White.
“The fundamental growth of the economy, the growth in Australia and the growth in the international marketplace around Australia tells us that this was a blip for sure.
“As long as we continue to do safe rides that are good experiences, and are well branded, then we’re going to do really well in the future.”
Industrial manslaughter laws to be introduced following Dreamworld tragedy POSTED 24 Aug 2017. BY Tom Anstey Queensland’s state government is set introduce industrial manslaughter laws, with safety
around theme park rides to also be tightened, following the deaths of four people at
Dreamworld last year.
Ardent revenue plummets in wake of DreamWorld tragedy POSTED 09 Feb 2017. BY Tom Anstey Ardent Leisure has seen revenue fall by more than half following a fatal accident at its
Dreamworld theme park on Australia’s Gold Coast last year.
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.
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.
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
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long transformation programme that has seen almost US$200 million invested into the Texas
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progressing, with the project set to transform the attraction into a global centre for reef
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