Matt N
CF Legend
Hi guys. In the last year or so, we’ve had a rather interesting prospect begin to develop in the form of Universal’s potential entry into the UK theme park market. This rather sudden revelation from Universal took the UK enthusiast community by storm, and by extension, I’d imagine that the revelation has piqued the industry’s interest as well. But with Universal showing signs of intending to develop in the UK, it does arguably pose some competitive risks to the parks that already reside in the UK. With this in mind, I’d be intrigued to know; which British theme park do you feel is left most at risk by the potential of Universal entering the UK?
Personally, I’m going to be slightly controversial and say that I think Universal poses the most risk to Alton Towers, of the current UK parks.
One reason I have for thinking this is that at present, most UK parks cater primarily to a day trip audience. Pretty much all of the smaller parks cater primarily to day trips, and I’d argue that even the London area Merlin parks are day trip-focused, to a strong extent. Thorpe Park in particular, of Merlin’s London properties, is predominantly day trip focused. Universal, on the other hand, will be going for the theme park short break pound, the sort of pound that goes to Disneyland Paris or PortAventura for a few days rather than Drayton Manor or Paultons Park for a regional day trip. With this in mind, I think there’s unlikely to be too much competitive overlap between Universal and most UK parks in this sense. But which park in the UK is an outlier in being somewhat more focused on theme park short breaks? Alton Towers. While the park does have many day visitors, it is unlike most UK parks in having an expansive and well-known resort offering; the park has 694 hotel rooms (indeed, this is supposedly more than Universal’s planned UK resort will open with), a waterpark, a crazy golf course and numerous other “resort”-y things that make it more than just a day trip theme park.
My other reason for feeling that Alton Towers potentially has the most to lose from Universal of the current UK parks is that unlike the other Merlin parks, I don’t feel it really has a strong USP or target market of its own that Universal will never aim to compete with. Thorpe Park has the big coasters, flat rides and general thrill-heavy targeting, Chessington has the zoo, and Legoland has the Lego; these are all areas in which Universal is unlikely to compete too heavily and which the 3 parks in question will likely always maintain a competitive advantage over Universal. But what does Alton Towers have? Universal is likely to aim for a very similar all-round target audience to Alton Towers, they are likely to go for a very similar “family theme park short break” pound to that which Alton Towers currently targets, and they are likely to trounce Alton in the areas of dark rides, theming, entertainment and IP. Granted, Alton Towers does have its thrill coasters, but to properly bend this to their competitive advantage, they’d likely have to do similar to Thorpe and up the thrill-heavy targeting, which would likely wipe out almost 30 years of trying to develop themselves as a family short break resort.
With all this in mind, I do personally feel that Alton perhaps has the toughest time ahead of the current UK parks if Universal does come to the UK. But I’d be keen to know; which UK theme park do you feel is left most at risk by the potential for Universal coming to the UK?
Personally, I’m going to be slightly controversial and say that I think Universal poses the most risk to Alton Towers, of the current UK parks.
One reason I have for thinking this is that at present, most UK parks cater primarily to a day trip audience. Pretty much all of the smaller parks cater primarily to day trips, and I’d argue that even the London area Merlin parks are day trip-focused, to a strong extent. Thorpe Park in particular, of Merlin’s London properties, is predominantly day trip focused. Universal, on the other hand, will be going for the theme park short break pound, the sort of pound that goes to Disneyland Paris or PortAventura for a few days rather than Drayton Manor or Paultons Park for a regional day trip. With this in mind, I think there’s unlikely to be too much competitive overlap between Universal and most UK parks in this sense. But which park in the UK is an outlier in being somewhat more focused on theme park short breaks? Alton Towers. While the park does have many day visitors, it is unlike most UK parks in having an expansive and well-known resort offering; the park has 694 hotel rooms (indeed, this is supposedly more than Universal’s planned UK resort will open with), a waterpark, a crazy golf course and numerous other “resort”-y things that make it more than just a day trip theme park.
My other reason for feeling that Alton Towers potentially has the most to lose from Universal of the current UK parks is that unlike the other Merlin parks, I don’t feel it really has a strong USP or target market of its own that Universal will never aim to compete with. Thorpe Park has the big coasters, flat rides and general thrill-heavy targeting, Chessington has the zoo, and Legoland has the Lego; these are all areas in which Universal is unlikely to compete too heavily and which the 3 parks in question will likely always maintain a competitive advantage over Universal. But what does Alton Towers have? Universal is likely to aim for a very similar all-round target audience to Alton Towers, they are likely to go for a very similar “family theme park short break” pound to that which Alton Towers currently targets, and they are likely to trounce Alton in the areas of dark rides, theming, entertainment and IP. Granted, Alton Towers does have its thrill coasters, but to properly bend this to their competitive advantage, they’d likely have to do similar to Thorpe and up the thrill-heavy targeting, which would likely wipe out almost 30 years of trying to develop themselves as a family short break resort.
With all this in mind, I do personally feel that Alton perhaps has the toughest time ahead of the current UK parks if Universal does come to the UK. But I’d be keen to know; which UK theme park do you feel is left most at risk by the potential for Universal coming to the UK?