Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

AN EPIC UNIVERSE Theme park is coming to Orlando, ramping up Universal’s battle with Disney

- By Gabrielle Russon and Dewayne Bevil

This concept art shows the layout for the new Universal theme park in Orlando to be called Epic Universe.

The war for tourists between Universal Orlando and Disney World escalated Thursday as Universal announced it will build a new theme park called Epic Universe.

The company released few details but said the new park will add 14,000 jobs with a base rate of $15 an hour. That also will boost pay for Universal employees at the other two Orlando theme parks who are currently paid a base of $12 an hour.

“We are going to make the largest investment we’ve ever made in a park,” said Brian Roberts, CEO of Comcast Corp., which owns Universal theme parks. He attended Thursday’s news conference with Gov. Ron DeSantis and Tom Williams, CEO of Universal Parks and Resorts.

Building a new theme park comes with a multibilli­on-dollar price tag and might take three years at a minimum, said Dennis Speigel, president of the Internatio­nal Theme Park Services consulting firm.

“It’s a boxing match,” Speigel said of the Disney-Universal fight. “The gloves have been taken off, and it’s a bare-knuckle match now.”

Universal’s Epic Universe will be the first from-the-ground-up theme park in Orlando since its Islands of Adventure debuted in 1999.

Orange County commission­ers already have approved a memo of understand­ing for a $125 million package of cash and tax breaks to extend Kirkman Road and provide access to the new theme park as well as the Orange County Convention Center and Lockheed Martin.

Universal will spend $160 million on the estimated $300 million road project, the company said.

The company made the announceme­nt at the convention center, close to land it owns where the theme park will go between Sand Lake Road and Universal Boulevard, near Internatio­nal Drive.

Williams declined to provide specifics about the expansion because of “competitiv­e pressure,” after reporters asked if it would feature themes pulled from Jurassic World, Harry Potter or Nintendo. He did not provide a cost or opening date. But he hinted the attraction will have more than just one single theme. “Last I heard, universe is a little bit bigger than a world,” Williams said. “So take it for what it is.

“Really, it’s more than a park,” Williams added. “It’s hotels, it’s shops, it’s restaurant­s — it’s a whole resort. … Our vision is a big one.”

A roller coaster, hotel?

Concept art released by Universal with an aerial view of Epic Universal shows what appears to

be a long, narrow, looping roller coaster; an amphitheat­er; an arched entryway; and a large multistory building that could be a hotel.

“I was looking and tried dissecting it,” said Brian Saeger, a freelance writer and owner of skywalking­adventure.com. “It looks like it’s going to be a shopping/ entertainm­ent district with a huge water-fountain concept that reminds me like the Bellagio in Vegas.”

At the news conference, Williams said Universal will lobby “with every bit of strength that we’ve got” for the high-speed Virgin

Trains being built between Orlando and South Florida to stop at the convention center, in the backyard of Universal’s new theme park.

“Orange County has invested a tremendous amount of money in building the second-largest convention Center in the United States of America,” Williams said. “You can’t bypass the convention center. It makes absolutely no sense. It ignores the investment that’s been made.”

The convention center drew 1.5 million visitors for the past fiscal year.

The king of theme parks is Disney,

the world’s busiest operator with an estimated 157 million visitors in 2018, according to the Themed Entertainm­ent Associatio­n and the global management firm AECOM’s annual report.

Universal, No. 3 with a projected 50 million visitors, has sought to make up ground.

“Now, let me say Disney is still No. 1,” Speigel said. “They have more gates. They have more everything, but Universal figured out after the Harry Potter introducti­on, they could rise to a level they never anticipate­d 20 years ago.”

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UNIVERSAL ORLANDO
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RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL

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