May 26, 2013, 10:57 AM
Welcome to my latest development. This park represents a marked departure from my usual park in that Marina Towers is surrounded by water and it has lots of duned sand.
It is the first park where I am seriously considering using alpine weather when the park is nearer completion. I always build in desert weather because in other weather the view is really impeded whenever it rains or gets very cloudy. A further contrast to my previous parks Marina Towers will only have one animal enclosure, built for the benefit of guests who enjoy horseback riding. In addition to horses the enclosure will also have zebras and gazelles for the children. Additionally the dolphin and orca shows will be placed directly into the lake rather than being put in an area that’s been specially excavated for them.
Built in a shallow sea on a man-made island this facility is a health resort, spa, convention centre and amusement park all rolled into one. A family park, Marina Towers may see Dad working out in the gym for an hour or two each day, Mom spending a few days a week in the spa and the kiddies amusing themselves either with or without their parents in the pleasure park. When the resort is completed, guests will stay for various durations ranging from a few days to a month or more. In addition to the spa, gym and convention centre Marina Towers contains one, two and three bedroomed multi-bathroomed suites in either single or duplex layouts. We anticipate that our longer term guests will prefer staying in our self-contained units.
Right now the developers have completed construction on the main building and have put in the pool so we can start attracting guests. Although the guests currently eat at restaurants inside the building we will soon be placing the food court in addition to roof-top restaurant. We may also put a pool with the restaurant on the roof of the main building.
Although this is another flat park we foresee it will eventually have a few gentle mesa-like contours with various areas of the park being on slightly different levels. A number of years ago our ride designers designed a couple of tall steelies that have gotten no further than virtual testing on the drawing board which because of their height we’ve been reluctant to actually build in any of our other parks, but with the sixty-storey hotel in this park those tall rides will integrate beautifully and the park developers are already scouting areas where they can go. The Park Design Committee envisage the following rides as slated for inclusion in the park: Rowing Boats, Bumper Boats, Windsurfer, Canoes, Jet Skis, Crazy Caterpillar, Dodgems, Fliptastic, Insect House, Parachute Drop, Reptile and Amphibian House, Roto Drop, Turbo Bikes, Sky Sling, our reliable stand-by meandering Woodie, perhaps another steelie or two, and a few flat rides including a carousel-type ride. It is anticipated that Mag-Lev and/or Gondoletta may be placed in this park as a shuttles.
At this point in time it’s so early in park development we haven’t yet sown any grass seed or installed the waterfall in the pool although the pool fountain plumbing tests successfully. Because of the newness of Marina Towers our guest length of stay is currently only a day or two.
Here is an image of an island the developers were first considering for Marina Towers Park and Resort.
After razing the existing stark uncultivated landscape and coming close to actually beginning construction on Xhuma Island it was eventually determined that the main drawback of the location was its startling geographical steepness and its situation in inordinately deep water in the middle of the Pacific thousands of miles away from anywhere else – issues we believed could be overlooked with extensive landscaping and skilful resort development. While the ethos of the resort is that the guests should feel they’ve gotten away from it all, the developers decided that if the work crew, their families and visitors constantly felt that they had been exiled to some outpost then we needed to be concerned that the guests would certainly feel that way too. After deciding Xhuma Island was not quite the location for this resort the developers moved on to what was originally our second choice, the engineered island where the hotel & spa resort is now being built. Xhuma Island, now somewhat slightly developed, is back on the market and again available for sale. We would not be surprised if we took a loss on the sale.
This photo was taken at about the time our developers (some of them pictured) decided Xhuma Island was a no-go. The photographer tells me that because this was an area of the island where the base rock was twenty feet below the sand it took him thirty minutes to get over to where he took the photo, another half hour to return to his colleagues and a further hour for them all to get up to where they had parked the helicopter. Another reason we were unable to go ahead with Xhuma is because of the unpredictable and extreme weather. As you can see in the photo it’s around noon but the sky had turned black with clouds although, when this photo was taken it cleared up again in ten minutes without the usual heavy rain but with fifteen minutes of unpleasant wind.
In addition to its isolation being erroneously considered an asset, Xhuma Island was the original choice because it’s about 225x225 tiles. The second choice is currently 210x210 but with much of it being underwater plans are being considered to expand the size of this new resort.
It is the first park where I am seriously considering using alpine weather when the park is nearer completion. I always build in desert weather because in other weather the view is really impeded whenever it rains or gets very cloudy. A further contrast to my previous parks Marina Towers will only have one animal enclosure, built for the benefit of guests who enjoy horseback riding. In addition to horses the enclosure will also have zebras and gazelles for the children. Additionally the dolphin and orca shows will be placed directly into the lake rather than being put in an area that’s been specially excavated for them.
Built in a shallow sea on a man-made island this facility is a health resort, spa, convention centre and amusement park all rolled into one. A family park, Marina Towers may see Dad working out in the gym for an hour or two each day, Mom spending a few days a week in the spa and the kiddies amusing themselves either with or without their parents in the pleasure park. When the resort is completed, guests will stay for various durations ranging from a few days to a month or more. In addition to the spa, gym and convention centre Marina Towers contains one, two and three bedroomed multi-bathroomed suites in either single or duplex layouts. We anticipate that our longer term guests will prefer staying in our self-contained units.
Right now the developers have completed construction on the main building and have put in the pool so we can start attracting guests. Although the guests currently eat at restaurants inside the building we will soon be placing the food court in addition to roof-top restaurant. We may also put a pool with the restaurant on the roof of the main building.
Although this is another flat park we foresee it will eventually have a few gentle mesa-like contours with various areas of the park being on slightly different levels. A number of years ago our ride designers designed a couple of tall steelies that have gotten no further than virtual testing on the drawing board which because of their height we’ve been reluctant to actually build in any of our other parks, but with the sixty-storey hotel in this park those tall rides will integrate beautifully and the park developers are already scouting areas where they can go. The Park Design Committee envisage the following rides as slated for inclusion in the park: Rowing Boats, Bumper Boats, Windsurfer, Canoes, Jet Skis, Crazy Caterpillar, Dodgems, Fliptastic, Insect House, Parachute Drop, Reptile and Amphibian House, Roto Drop, Turbo Bikes, Sky Sling, our reliable stand-by meandering Woodie, perhaps another steelie or two, and a few flat rides including a carousel-type ride. It is anticipated that Mag-Lev and/or Gondoletta may be placed in this park as a shuttles.
At this point in time it’s so early in park development we haven’t yet sown any grass seed or installed the waterfall in the pool although the pool fountain plumbing tests successfully. Because of the newness of Marina Towers our guest length of stay is currently only a day or two.
Here is an image of an island the developers were first considering for Marina Towers Park and Resort.
After razing the existing stark uncultivated landscape and coming close to actually beginning construction on Xhuma Island it was eventually determined that the main drawback of the location was its startling geographical steepness and its situation in inordinately deep water in the middle of the Pacific thousands of miles away from anywhere else – issues we believed could be overlooked with extensive landscaping and skilful resort development. While the ethos of the resort is that the guests should feel they’ve gotten away from it all, the developers decided that if the work crew, their families and visitors constantly felt that they had been exiled to some outpost then we needed to be concerned that the guests would certainly feel that way too. After deciding Xhuma Island was not quite the location for this resort the developers moved on to what was originally our second choice, the engineered island where the hotel & spa resort is now being built. Xhuma Island, now somewhat slightly developed, is back on the market and again available for sale. We would not be surprised if we took a loss on the sale.
This photo was taken at about the time our developers (some of them pictured) decided Xhuma Island was a no-go. The photographer tells me that because this was an area of the island where the base rock was twenty feet below the sand it took him thirty minutes to get over to where he took the photo, another half hour to return to his colleagues and a further hour for them all to get up to where they had parked the helicopter. Another reason we were unable to go ahead with Xhuma is because of the unpredictable and extreme weather. As you can see in the photo it’s around noon but the sky had turned black with clouds although, when this photo was taken it cleared up again in ten minutes without the usual heavy rain but with fifteen minutes of unpleasant wind.
In addition to its isolation being erroneously considered an asset, Xhuma Island was the original choice because it’s about 225x225 tiles. The second choice is currently 210x210 but with much of it being underwater plans are being considered to expand the size of this new resort.