Couple of things here.
We work in the construction industry, and we tend to be the last people affected by 'recession'. The reason being that we install the last bits of build - the outside coatings and the ceiling tiles.
What does this have to do with HRP?
When a new build is brought up, it's done so based on the current, and projected, economic climate. The spend will be assigned, and projected profits put forward.
The investors will check the figures and make sure it all adds up to sustainable profitability. However, it's many years from sitting around the table with figures, to the actual opening of the build. A lot can (and in this case HAS) happen in that time with the economy.
It's just unlucky that HRP have opened on a poor year, probably when they knew the first year was going to be tight anyway. Okay, you need to provision for some bad luck, but obviously they didn't provision enough.
We installed some stuff at HRP actually, over twelve months ago we go paid about £200,000 for the stuff we put up there. That was a tiny percentage of their build costs, and they have to try and recoup that initial investment, or a small degree of it in the first x years. If the footfall isn't there due to economic downturn, there's jst nothing they can do. To be honest, they probably had an idea last year, but it's all just too late, so they have to try their best anyway.
As long as people understand that you don't just wake up on Saturday morning and think "I'm going to invest £500,000,000 in a new park" then have it open by the following Friday. The timescales are in years. Sometimes it pays off, others it doesn't.
Second point. Gill here at work went to Myrtle Beach last week. I'd told her about the park, but she didn't know where it was, or had seen anything about it, until they were out for a drive one day down a particular highway. It's one of those, if she'd wanted to go, she could have probably dug out the information - but she said that there was nothing obvious around the area directing here there. So local marketing possibly wasn't all it could have been?