Los Angeles Times

Disneyland Paris to expand with new attraction­s

- By Hugo Martin hugo.martin@latimes.com

Walt Disney Co. continued on its theme park spending spree Tuesday, unveiling a $2.4-billion expansion of Disneyland Paris that will bring some of its most popular new attraction­s to the French resort.

At an event with French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris, Disney Chairman and Chief Executive Robert Iger announced the plans, which include three new areas based on Marvel characters, the animated hit “Frozen” and the Star Wars franchise.

The plans come only a year after Iger announced plans to buy out all shareholde­rs in the European park and invest $1.6 billion in hopes of turning around sluggish attendance amid terrorism fears in France.

At the same time, Disney is spending about $1 billion to build a 14-acre Star Wars expansion at Disneyland, plus a similar area for another $1 billion at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla. — among other upgrades in its theme park empire.

Overseas, the media giant’s biggest investment has been a nearly 1,000-acre, $5.5-billion developmen­t in Shanghai, which opened in 2016 and has done well.

Analysts say the company’s focus on its parks is a smart long-term investment, given the company has the capital to do so — thanks in part to a $1.6-billion one-time benefit from the recent corporate tax cut.

“They are going to continue to invest today for 30 years down the road,” said Naveen Sarma, a media and telecom analyst for Standard and Poor’s.

Disney offered few details about the expansion but said it will roll out in three phases beginning in 2021 and will add a lake that will connect the three new areas.

Disneyland Paris is about 20 miles outside of the French capital and includes two theme parks, a Disneyland Paris similar to the Anaheim park and a TV-andmovie-focused Walt Disney Studios Park. The 5,510-acre park includes seven resort hotels, a golf course, a railway station and a large shopping mall.

The park in the Marne-laValleis suburb is an economic powerhouse in France, employing 16,000 and generating spending that represents 6.2% of France’s entire tourism income.

However, it got off to a rocky start when it opened in 1992 as Euro Disney. Labor disputes and complaints that the park was not infused with enough European flavor dragged down attendance and spending for the first few years.

The resort anticipate­d 11 million annual visitors when it opened but attracted only about 9.8 million in the first full year. It was hurt by a recession that hit Europe about the same time.

After Disney invested $1.3 billion in 2014, attendance and revenue began to improve. Among the improvemen­ts were renovation­s to the Big Thunder Mountain, It’s a Small World and Peter Pan’s Flight attraction­s.

But the resort took a hit after the 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris. Attendance dropped nearly 10% to 13.4 million visitors in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, 2016, resulting in a loss of about $260 million.

The park reported marginal improvemen­ts toward the end of 2016, with a 3% increase in attendance and a 5% jump in revenue for the quarter ended Dec. 31 compared with a year earlier.

During the company’s most recent earnings call with analysts this month, Christine McCarthy, Disney’s chief financial officer, said the 25th-anniversar­y celebratio­n at the Paris park last year helped boost attendance, guest spending and hotel occupancy.

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