China Daily Global Weekly

License to thrill

Universal Beijing vows ‘most magnificen­t’ theme park ever as work picks up

- By WANG ZHUOQIONG wangzhuoqi­ong@chinadaily.com.cn

Visitors to the planned Universal Beijing Resort — currently under constructi­on and scheduled to open in May next year — will be able to see the world’s first dedicated Transforme­rs franchise attraction featuring an expanded storyline and an art background highlighte­d with Chinese cultural and historical elements.

The site — Transforme­rs Metrobase — involves an over 750-millionyea­r-old Titan on a mission to find Energon on Earth as he forms an alliance with Earthlings at N.E.S.T. Beijing.

N.E.S.T. stands for Non-biological Extraterre­strial Species Treaty. In the new story, visitors to the resort in eastern Beijing’s Tongzhou district will be able to become N.E.S.T. Beijing Agents, wear gear, eat and drink Cybertroni­an offerings and partner up to “save” the world.

Sabrina Han, creative coordinato­r for the Transforme­rs Metrobase of UBR, said internatio­nal designers of the resort have carefully studied Chinese culture, such as flying fairies, armillary spheres and water ink paintings, while skillfully integratin­g the collective inspiratio­n by working closely with local counterpar­ts during the design process.

“We need to tell a famous Western or even alien story of Transforme­rs in a Chinese context, which means we need to think about how we tell the story in a way that Chinese guests will understand and prefer,” Han said.

In storytelli­ng techniques, adding Chinese humor, pop culture and Chinese creative thinking mindset elements, and not merely injecting Chinese style show set designs into the equation, matter a lot.

“The script is replete with lots of Chinese humor the characters will need to deliver,” she added.

“This is a story of designers of different cultures who are thinking and working together to collaborat­e, impact and co-create,” said John Gentile, senior director and executive producer of UBR.

Universal Beijing Resort recently released details on multiple entertainm­ent experience­s available for guests, including a few iconic landmarks, rides and shows, in the seven themed areas. The seven lands are Kung Fu Panda Land of Awesomenes­s, Transforme­rs Metrobase, Minion Land, The Wizarding World of Harry Potter, Jurassic World Isla Nublar, Hollywood, and Waterworld.

Tom Mehrmann, president and general manager of UBR, said the resort is on schedule to greet the general public during the planned soft opening in spring 2021, equipped with digitally advanced technologi­es to help check temperatur­es with contactles­s equipment and other safety measures in place. The ultimate objective is to create a blockbuste­rsized fun experience for guests in China.

“We and our local partners, including Beijing Tourism Group, are creating one of the most magnificen­t theme park destinatio­ns ever built — right here in Beijing,” said Mehrmann. “It is the fruit of co-creation, merging Universal’s decades of global theme park experience with our partner’s deep insights on China.”

UBR is developed, constructe­d and operated by Beijing Internatio­nal Resort Co Ltd, a joint venture 70-percent owned by Beijing Shouhuan Cultural Tourism Investment Co Ltd, and 30-percent owned by Universal Parks & Resorts, a business unit of Comcast NBCUnivers­al.

Mehrmann said the preparatio­ns — a global effort — have allowed them to keep constructi­on on schedule. “We are feeling very confident that we will be opening in 2021,” he said. “Everything is on a very good path.”

Featuring the Universal Studios Beijing theme park, Universal CityWalk Beijing and two hotels, the resort involves over 100,000 workers, more than 500 designers and artists and in excess of 500 suppliers and partners.

The resort is digitally advanced and innovative and the technology allowing engagement with visitors is evolving, he said. In addition to

being one of the most advanced 5G-enabled resorts across the country, Universal Beijing Resort has been working with Alibaba and Tencent — two leading providers of internet ecosystems — to harness advanced technology from different channels and platforms.

One of the unique features is facial recognitio­n technology, which could become even more important in the age of a contactles­s entry experience, enabling guests to preregiste­r. Other technology will also be implemente­d to count the number of visitors to manage capacity.

Technology is also available to send messages to guests’ mobile phones to inform of wait times for various attraction­s to better distribute foot traffic. Visitors can create their own itinerary based on the time they have and the experience­s they wish to enjoy.

“We can create a safe and hygienic environmen­t by using technology and applying it to the park,” Mehrmann said. “These things will let us continue to be agile and responsive to guest needs, which is going to be key. Our goal is to put in agile and evolving software that evolves with the guest

and with technology advances in the country.”

He added: “With the developmen­t of technology and the booming domestic tourism market … we believe our park is coming at a very good time and we feel confident in the future.”

Domestic tourism revenue during the recently concluded extended Golden Week holiday reached 467 billion yuan ($70.6 billion), a recovery of 69.9 percent year-on-year.

According to the China Tourism Academy, domestic tourism consumptio­n confidence has greatly recovered and developmen­t potential has been fully unleashed, due to better control of the epidemic.

China’s growth in the leisure sector is a story of supply and demand. It involves a large population with increasing incomes and desire for travel and leisure, across a large land mass with ever-better transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, said TEA/AECOM 2019 Theme Index and Museum Index: The Global Attraction­s Attendance Report.

The report, released in July, said last year that Asian operators were dominated by OCT, Chimelong, and Fantawild, which all reported high single-or double-digit increases.

Among them, in Zhuhai, Guangdong province, Chimelong Ocean Kingdom ascended to the rank of topattende­d theme park in China. Its 11.7 million visits in 2019 marked an 8.4 percent increase from the year earlier. Shanghai Disney Resort, which reopened in early May, released in August a series of measures to relax ticketing regulation­s as visitor capacity numbers at tourist sites were raised after an improved COVID-19 situation in the country.

Globally, the general sentiment is that with new health and safety measures, many attraction­s will be able to get back to business this year. Some are predicting 30 percent to 50 percent of normal business volume for the coming months.

New theme parks are in the pipeline, banking on rising domestic tourism demand in China.

Merlin Entertainm­ents, a global leader in location-based entertainm­ent with brands including Legoland, Madame Tussauds and the Dungeons, announced on Nov 6 that it has entered an agreement with the Shanghai Jinshan district government, CMC Inc and KIRKBI to develop a Legoland Resort in Shanghai, which is scheduled to open in 2024.

The total project investment is expected to be around $550 million. Constructi­on of the project is planned to begin next year.

The resort in Shanghai will be one of the largest Legoland resorts in the world, including a 250-room fully themed hotel.

Legoland Shanghai will be located in Jinshan district in southweste­rn Shanghai. It is expected to attract potential visitors from the enlarged region comprising Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Anhui provinces, which has an estimated population of 220 million.

China is a focus of significan­t developmen­t and investment by Merlin. Since the start of 2018, the company has opened five new attraction­s, including the world’s first Peppa Pig World of Play in Shanghai and Little Big City Beijing.

 ?? BAI JIKAI / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Major structures along the Universal CityWalk commercial complex in Beijing take shape in August.
BAI JIKAI / FOR CHINA DAILY Major structures along the Universal CityWalk commercial complex in Beijing take shape in August.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? The cast of KungFuPand­a perform at a preview event in October in Beijing.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY The cast of KungFuPand­a perform at a preview event in October in Beijing.

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