Houston Chronicle Sunday

Legoland theme park and hotel is built for kids

- By Rick Bentley

CARLSBAD, Calif. — It’s midafterno­on on a hot day. After a full morning at a theme park, energy is running low. While the adults are ready to leave the fun behind for a few hours rest, there are many in the party who don’t want to leave.

Legoland has come up with a solution.

The Legoland Hotel, which opened in April, sits just outside the entrance to the theme park. The three-story, 250-room hotel is an explosion of primary colors made to resemble the colorful structures that can be made using the popular toy bricks. It’s not unusual for hotels to have a décor that continues the theme of an amusement park. But the Legoland Hotel was been designed as if it was part of the park.

From the Kingdom-, Pirate- and Adventuret­hemed rooms to the Lego bricks found from the lobby to your room, leaving the park doesn’t mean leaving the fun behind.

“We wanted the hotel to continue the theme we have here in the park of promoting interactio­n, promoting creativity, inspiring kids to use their imaginatio­n,” says Jake Gonzales, a spokesman for the park and hotel. “It’s about kids. This isn’t a park built for adults using a kid’s theme. This is a child’s park that adults can enjoy, too. The hotel’s the same way.”

Rooms are designed to give adults and children their own space. Bunk beds are situated in an area where children can play with Legos, watch TV (that only shows kid-friendly channels) or figure out the combinatio­n to the in-room safe where kid treasures await.

“A lot of things in the rooms were designed just for kids, such as a peep hole low in the door and a training seat in the toilet,” Gonzales says.

The attention to young visitors doesn’t end in the room. There are more than 3,500 Lego models in the hotel — created from more than three million bricks — and seven are animated. In the lobby, kids are urged to build with Legos while their parents check in. And each restaurant has kids in mind, including Bricks Family Restaurant where a buffet station is at a height they can reach.

The main draw is the 128-acre theme park created by Danish toy maker the Lego Co. It has more than 60 interactiv­e rides, shows and attraction­s, as well as restaurant­s, shopping and more than 27,000 models created from some 57 million Legos.

The Southern California park opened in 1999, the third Lego park built and the first outside Europe. It’s divided into nine areas: the Beginning, Dino Island, Pirates Shores, Miniland USA, Duplo Viil- lage, Castle Hill, Imaginatio­n Zone, Fun Town and Land of Adventure. The Sealife Aquarium opened in 2008 and two years later the Legoland Water Park was added.

A majority of the attraction­s are aimed at those aged 2-12. Gonzales says that it’s just an urban myth visitors can’t get into the park without being accompanie­d by a minor.

“Adults can come without a child. In fact, we have a lot of adults who grew up playing with Legos,” Gonzales says.

None of the models in the park or hotel have been made from molds. The only material used that’s not a Lego brick and glue is a steel frame used for support. Because the park is designed to be interactiv­e, models must be strong enough to withstand the assault of visitors.

Each model has individual­ly been made by the craftsmen on the park grounds. No spot in the park shows the skill of the model makers more than Miniland USA, which features famous communitie­s such as New York and San Francisco made from millions of blocks.

Washington, D.C., features faithful recreation­s of the White House, Smithsonia­n, Washington Monument and Jefferson Memorial and parts of Georgetown. An animated marching band parades in front of the Capitol as a new president is sworn in. Tiny cherry trees blossom every spring.

If you prefer worlds that exist in a galaxy far, far away, the Lego Star Wars Miniland model display includes everything from a life-size model of Chewbacca to scenes from Tatooine and Hoth.

The newest attraction in the park is the Lego Movie Experience, where one of the sets from “The Lego Movie” can be seen. It took more than 2,000 man hours by 11 builders, to create.

 ?? Christophe­r Reynolds photos / McClatchy-Tribune News Service ?? The Legoland Hotel, which opened in 2013, includes 250 rooms on three levels and a pool.
Christophe­r Reynolds photos / McClatchy-Tribune News Service The Legoland Hotel, which opened in 2013, includes 250 rooms on three levels and a pool.
 ??  ?? The hotel’s public spaces are dominated by kids’ play areas and thousands of Lego bricks.
The hotel’s public spaces are dominated by kids’ play areas and thousands of Lego bricks.
 ??  ?? Legoland Hotel’s Skyline Cafe has an ever-changing city skyline, with moving parts.
Legoland Hotel’s Skyline Cafe has an ever-changing city skyline, with moving parts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States