Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

PARK IDEA WENT WAY OF THE DINOSAUR

Special effects wizard unable to conjure support for $50m interactiv­e experience at Pimpama

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GRAND plans for a $50 million dinosaur theme park at a northern Gold Coast site were unveiled as the silver bullet to boosting the city’s tourism offerings.

Proposed by Academy Award-winning special effects wizard John Cox, Footprints Discovery Park was to become the city’s first new theme park since the opening of Movie World in 1991.

But despite an enthusiast­ic reaction when it was unveiled 20 years ago this week, it never came to be.

Today, Gold Coasters are eagerly watching on as planning and assessment continues on a $600 million proposed theme park at Carrara.

Australian Legends World, put forward by Chinese developer Songcheng, will feature an indoor ski field, animal exhibits and adventure park along with a 3500-seat performanc­e theatre and is expected to create thousands of jobs during its constructi­on.

It is one of several new theme parks proposed for sites across the city in the past decade.

But Mr Cox’s idea came before all those.

It was February 1999 – John Howard was Prime Minister, Savage Garden were heating up the charts and, with the Millennium approachin­g, the Gold Coast was looking for a bold new idea.

And it was found in the imaginatio­n of the man who had won an Academy Award for the special effects of the 1995 film Babe.

The then-Labrador-based animatroni­cs expert filed a developmen­t applicatio­n with Gold Coast City Council for a vacant 38.7ha site in Pimpama.

The site, with a 1.5km highway frontage, had room for future expansion, with plans for accommodat­ion and a conference centre.

It was expected to hold more than 6000 people at any one time with up to 500 jobs to be created.

Mr Cox told the Bulletin at the time that the park would “test imaginatio­ns”.

“The park is an outdoor discovery park,” he said.

“There are a number of rides, but the majority of attraction­s are interactiv­e.

“Most of the park is outdoors and it’s all there for children to discover and use their imaginatio­ns.”

The father of two said it was aimed at children.

“There are a lot of things kids don’t get to experience anymore,” he said.

“Video games and television takes up a lot of their time and they forget that they’ve got imaginatio­ns and they can make up everything.”

Mr Cox spent $4.25 million buying the land, which sat between Yawalpah Rd and Old Pacific Hwy.

It was welcomed by city leaders, including councillor­s David Power and Jan Grew.

“I think it’s a marvellous concept and I’m sure the people in the area will be very supportive of it,” Cr Power said.

Mr Cox hoped to begin constructi­on in mid-1999 and open the park in November 2000.

But despite the backing of political leaders, the project failed to gain investors.

Councillor­s signed off on the developmen­t in September 1999 and the search for financial backers began.

But by 2005 the project was dead in the water and Mr Cox turned his attention to creating smaller experience­s.

That year he opened his How to Make a Monster exhibit at the Queensland Museum.

“Julie and I attended a convention in America two years ago about the state of the theme park industry,’’ he told the Bulletin at the time

“Somebody who was trying to get a theme park off the ground, similar to ours, said if people weren’t willing to jump on your idea, to think smaller and repackage.

“One of the attraction­s we had in Footprints Discovery Park was an old theatre house with an exhibition inside called How to Make a Monster.

“I was sitting there and this little light just instantly went off and I thought ‘let’s pull that exhibition out’.”

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 ??  ?? John Cox with some of the creatures for his planned Footprints Discovery Theme Park proposed for the Gold Coast in 1999 and (below left) the plans for the park and (right) John with the Academy Award in 1996 for his involvemen­t with the movie Babe.
John Cox with some of the creatures for his planned Footprints Discovery Theme Park proposed for the Gold Coast in 1999 and (below left) the plans for the park and (right) John with the Academy Award in 1996 for his involvemen­t with the movie Babe.

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