Maybe an uneducated comment but seems like it'd be tough to source a workforce at a location like this. An hour drive from Tulsa..
Maybe an uneducated comment but seems like it'd be tough to source a workforce at a location like this. An hour drive from Tulsa..
LOL. Some lady who lived in Claremore once isn't exactly a great source and if she's from there...I'm sure she has a more negative view than those of us that go up there for recreation all the time. Grand Lake is out there which is a decent tourist destination similar to Table Rock or Lake of The Ozarks in MO.
I found some land purchased by a group that looks like it has ties to these guys and is in the general area they mentioned. I'll see if I can map it and post it here.
You will probably be able to do the theme park in a day, then what? When we visited Branson a couple years ago, we stayed a few days. We spent a day going to shows/attractions, spent a day at Silver Dollar City, and spent a day shopping/eating/sight seeing in Branson proper.
I'm more worried about them not actually having the money to build all of this than it being in Vinita.
SDC started out as a cave attraction and has grown into a large company with many business arms and other parks throughout the US. That took them about 60 years. These guys are trying to jump past them in one move.
SDC still has had enormous trouble with their workforce. It's been very bad in recent years and has only recently gotten a little better. There are still a few places within the park that they don't have enough people to staff so they sit closed. They are about to open some new employee dormitories since housing is so scarce in the area. Branson only has a few thousand people actually living full time in town, and a lot of that is retirees. A friend of mine commutes to work at SDC from the Springfield area every day, which I've always thought was crazy.
There is plenty already to do in this area if you like the outdoors. What a crazy comment that there isn't anything to do. Grand Lake by itself has numerous State Parks. I vacationed for a 3 day weekend and we wished we'd have done more because we rarely find ourselves in this part of the states. Had this park been there we'd have for sure done 5 days from the get go.
This isn't even worth debating folks, it's a ridiculous comment.
The highlighted parcels were owned by 1248 Holdings, LLC, and others related to Gene Bicknell who is affiliated with this group and spoke in the presentation today. They were recently transferred to OGB Holdings, LLC in January 2023, which is also most likely controlled by Gene Bicknell (OGB are his initials) and others affiliated with the project. It looks like they initially purchased a ranch and some surrounding properties for around $7 million between 4/26/22 and 7/6/22 (about $4,000/acre). In total they control 1,760.622 acres.
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Exactly. Like I was trying to say earlier...those are comments from a disillusioned person who has lived in Claremore her whole life and just got out...not someone who goes up there for recreation purposes...very similar to "There's nothing in OKC. I hate it here. Can't wait to leave." Not a good source for evaluating the viability of a project.
"The person taking my order, who has worked at chick fil a for 10 years, says it's terrible and that he/she can't understand why people eat there"
Exactly. SDC's first roller coaster (Fire in the Hole) was built in 1972, 12 years after opening. Sadly, they are shuttering this coaster this year. The next oldest is Thunderation (1993) built 33 years after opening.
Don't they already have some employee dormitories there?
Shangri-La has some employee housing (according to one of the workers last month).
When I first saw the thread title. I was hopping it was Universal's smaller projects theme park projects.
I was curious about how much $2 billion is for a Theme park that is expecting to produce like 4,000 jobs - so looked around for other, current projects.
Univeral's Epic Universe theme park is estimated to cost $1 billion-plus and is Universal's top project to date — and the Orlando-area's biggest one underway. It involves building a new theme park and a surrounding complex with multiple hotels, restaurants, entertainment, back of house, parking and support amenities. It is being built on 700 acres Universal already owned and is expected to create up to 14,000 new permanent theme park jobs.
It also seems that only 3 years to create such a large park is quite ambitious. I wonder if that is part of the reason it will cost so much - to accelerate the construction process.
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