Los Angeles Times

SeaWorld plans new attraction­s

The company will invest $175 million in cutting-edge theme park technology.

- By Lori Weisberg lori.weisberg @sduniontri­bune.com

The company will invest $175 million in cutting-edge theme park technology.

SeaWorld Entertainm­ent Inc. said it would spend $175 million on new attraction­s, including a documentar­y-style orca encounter in San Diego to replace the theatrical Shamu shows that have been the park’s signature draw for half a century.

The substantia­l investment in new rides and marine mammal experience­s marks what SeaWorld is calling one of its largest new attraction years in its history. The Tuesday announceme­nt, which includes Florida’s first virtual reality coaster at its Orlando, Fla., marine park, also signals the company’s move to lure more visitors with cutting-edge theme park technology while still staying true to its mission of providing meaningful experience­s that it hopes will educate and inspire people to take action on behalf of animals and the environmen­t.

The attraction­s planned for San Diego — the new orca encounter and a miniature submarine ride geared to young families — had previously been announced, but the virtual reality coaster is a project that SeaWorld had not revealed before Tuesday. The plan is to retrofit Kraken, SeaWorld Orlando’s oldest coaster, with virtual reality headsets, immersing riders on a deep-sea mission alongside sea creatures inspired by extinct and mythical creatures of the past, including the fictional Kraken.

Although there is no virtual reality coaster in Florida now, more theme parks are looking to incorporat­e the technology into their rides. Six Flags has added headsets to some of its coasters, including Magic Mountain’s reinvented New Revolution VR coaster that debuted this year.

SeaWorld is trying to boost attendance and revenue, which have been hit by criticism of its treatment of its orcas as well as its Shamu shows that called on the killer whales to perform tricks and acrobatic moves. In March, the company said it was ending breeding of its 29 orcas and phasing out the theatrical shows.

Last week, in the face of lower cash reserves than it anticipate­d, SeaWorld revealed that it would cut its next quarterly dividend by more than half and suspend future payouts.

“They still have huge issues around image and branding they have to overcome,” said consultant Dennis Speigel of Internatio­nal Theme Park Services. Still, he added, “They have 50 years of legacy that won’t go away in two years.”

Plans for the new orca encounter, which eventually will be introduced at the other marine parks in Orlando and San Antonio, will be designed to showcase the whales’ natural behaviors — hunting, eating, communicat­ing — against a documentar­y-style backdrop that will transport the audience to locations in the wild.

This past summer, visitors to the San Diego park could have gotten a sense of where SeaWorld was headed if they had happened to see the new “Killer Whales: Up Close” presentati­on, where the trainers talk about the care given orcas, what they eat, their coloration pattern and what guests can do to help protect the oceans.

Next summer, visitors will see the park’s new Ocean Explorer attraction, which will occupy 3 acres and feature multiple aquariums and a submarine ride that will give guests the sense of being a deep-sea explorer. The subs will be outfitted with digital navigation dashboards customized for different age levels.

The San Diego and Orlando parks will also be getting a new nighttime show called Electric Ocean that will include biolumines­cent lighting, music and performanc­es along the parks’ pathways.

 ?? SeaWorld Entertainm­ent Inc. ?? A RENDERING SHOWS SeaWorld’s plans for its documentar­y-style orca encounter attraction in San Diego.
SeaWorld Entertainm­ent Inc. A RENDERING SHOWS SeaWorld’s plans for its documentar­y-style orca encounter attraction in San Diego.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States