China’s richest man declares war on Disney with giant theme park

Published May 29, 2016
NANCHANG: People visit the newly opened theme park ‘Wanda City’ in China’s Jiangxi province on Saturday.—AFP
NANCHANG: People visit the newly opened theme park ‘Wanda City’ in China’s Jiangxi province on Saturday.—AFP

THE Chinese conglomerate Wanda on Saturday opened its first theme park, with its billionaire boss declaring war on Disney weeks before the American entertainment giant launches a similar attraction in Shanghai.

“Wanda City”, in south-eastern Nanchang, comprises a giant mall set over two square kilometres, as well as an 80-hectare theme park boasting “the highest and longest roller coaster and the highest drop tower in China”, according to a statement by the group. The project represents an investment of 22 billion yuan ($3.4 billion), the statement said.

“We want to be a model ... and highlight Chinese influence in the cultural domain,” Wanda founder Wang Jianlin said during an opening ceremony at the park as he referenced an “invasion” of foreign cultures, according to state television channel CCTV.

A week before, Wang — China’s richest man, according to Forbes magazine — said he was setting his sights on Disney, which in June will open its first theme park on the mainland.

After the site in Nanchang, Wanda plans to open six more theme parks in China within three years and plans to have around 15 in the country by 2020. “We want to ensure that Disney will not be able to make a profit in this [theme park] sector in China for between 10 and 20 years,” he said during an interview with CCTV.

Meanwhile Disney’s project in Shanghai — a 5.5-billion-dollar investment — will be its sixth theme park and its fourth outside the United States after Paris, Tokyo and Hong Kong.

The American giant is hoping its popular franchises will appeal to a booming Chinese middle class, in a country where it has been generating an increasing share of its box office revenue.

Published in Dawn, May 29th, 2016

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