The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Magic Kingdom, the Louvre are tops in visitorshi­p survey

- By Andrea Sachs

A recent survey on theme parks and museums would make the Mona Lisa smile: The Louvre was the world’s most-visited museum last year, with 8.1 million people admiring the art at the Paris institutio­n. Of course, Cinderella doesn’t have to feel threatened by the woman with the enigmatic expression. Almost 20.5 million parkgoers chose Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom in Orlando, Florida, as their happy place.

For the 12th consecutiv­e year, the Themed Entertainm­ent Associatio­n and AECOM, a developmen­t services firm, have released their Theme Index and Museum Index. The report ranks the top museums, water parks and theme parks in the world and by region, based on attendance. It also describes the forces behind the peaks and valleys. For example, the index explains why Disney parks in North America grew by 3 percent (the debut of “Pandora — the World of Avatar”) and water parks shrank (bad weather, lack of reinvestme­nt) and which country is helping keep ride operators and character actors employed (China).

“The major theme park operators had an outstandin­g year with 8.6 percent overall growth led largely by properties in China, where attendance swelled by nearly 20 percent,” the report states. “Global attraction attendance at the major operators is now almost half a billion visits a year, and is more than double the attendance of all the major sport leagues around the world.”

The Mouse dominated, of course. Disney welcomed 150 million guests to its venues worldwide, taking first place in the Top 10 Theme Park Groups division. In North America, its parks swept the first five of 20 spots. Overall, 244 million visitors headed to the world’s top 25 theme parks, a nearly 5 percent gain over the previous year. (By comparison, 30.1 million folks soaked at the top 20 water parks and 108 million explored the top 20 museums.)

“Theme parks kept up with the growth,” said Linda Cheu, vice president of economics at AECOM.

While the theme park population flourished, museum visitation numbers remained stagnant - with a few exceptions. For instance, Washington’s National Gallery of Art and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London expanded by 22 and 25 percent, respective­ly. Cheu said that for museums to stay au courant, they must aim young.

“Museums are creating events and programs to attract millennial­s,” she said. As examples, she cited the Thursday-night parties with D Js and scientists at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, adult sleepovers at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City and yoga classes at institutio­ns nationwide.

She also credited the uptick to technologi­cal advances such as augmented and virtual reality; renovation­s and expansions; traveling exhibits; and blockbuste­r shows. The V&A Museum, for one, checked off two of those boxes: The decorative arts museum unveiled a $70 million addition last summer and also curated major exhibits on Pink Floyd, plywood and the fashion designer Balenciaga. When asked if price scared off visitors, Cheu said that it didn’t. In fact, half of the top 20 museums charge to enter, including the Metropolit­an Museum of Art, the most recent addition to the admission-fee club.

“We did not find any significan­t correlatio­n between pricing and attendance,” she said. “There is some elasticity there.”

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