Wonderland Sydney (original) (raw)

Theme park in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Wonderland Sydney

Location Eastern Creek, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates 33°48′04″S 150°50′51″E / 33.80119°S 150.84754°E / -33.80119; 150.84754
Opened 7 December 1985 (1985-12-07)
Closed 26 April 2004 (2004-04-26)
Owner Kings Entertainment Company (1985–1996) Sunway Group (1997–2004)
Slogan "Greatest Fun You'll Ever Have" (1985–1986) "Too Much Fun To Have In One Day" (1987–1988) "Wouldn't it be wonderful if the world was Wonderland’ (1988–1995) "No Wonder They Call It Wonderland" (1995–1998) "Get Out Of Everydayland" (1998–2001)
Operating season All year round
Area 219 hectares
Attractions
Total Approx. 24 at peak
Roller coasters 3

Wonderland Sydney (originally known as Australia's Wonderland) was an amusement park in Eastern Creek, Sydney, Australia.[1] Officially opened in December 1985 by the Premier of New South Wales, Neville Wran,[2] the park was the largest in the southern hemisphere. It remained open for over 18 years and was the premier theme park in New South Wales for much of its life until its closure in 2004.

The entrance gate.

Wonderland Sydney, then known as Australia's Wonderland opened amid much media attention and publicity on 7 December 1985 with financial backing from the New South Wales State Superannuation Board, James Hardie, Leighton Holdings and Taft Broadcasting (through Kings Entertainment Company)[3] at Eastern Creek on the junction of Wallgrove Road and the M4 Motorway. The developers sought to provide an alternative to the troubled Luna Park Sydney, which had opened and closed multiple times in its recent history. The area would also see the opening of Eastern Creek Raceway in 1990 as the Sydney metropolitan area expanded to the west.

Wonderland opened with three separate themed areas within the park: 'Goldrush', 'Medieval Faire' (later renamed Old Botany Bay), and 'Hanna-Barbera Land' (later renamed 'Little Wonders Land' in 2001–2002) which featured rides and attractions based on characters from Hanna-Barbera animation shows such as Yogi Bear, Scooby-Doo and The Flintstones. The park was modeled heavily around Canada's Wonderland, a theme park located north of Toronto, with both parks being constructed by Taft Broadcasting, a company which also owned Hanna-Barbera.

For many years, Wonderland's flagship ride was 'The Bush Beast' which was the largest wooden roller coaster in Australia. Australia's Wonderland also claimed that it was the largest wooden rollercoaster in the Southern Hemisphere. 'The Beastie', a smaller version of The Bush Beast which catered to younger riders, was also one of the original rides. The park would later add rides such as the 'Demon' (1992) and 'Space Probe 7' (1995; sponsored by the Seven Network, who bought naming rights to the ride. After this contract expired, the ride dropped the '7' from its name).

Australia's Wonderland expanded, and rebranded as Wonderland Sydney it featured an all-new water park known as 'The Beach', which first opened in 1988. Unlike the rest of the park, which remained open year-round, The Beach was a seasonal attraction which closed during the winter months (June–September). In 1990 Wonderland opened the 'Australian Wildlife Park'. Another attraction named 'The Outback Woolshed' was added in 1995, along with an à-la-carte-style restaurant.

Ownership and acquisitions

[edit]

Logo when the park was known as Australia's Wonderland, used from its foundation in 1985 until 1997.

Eventually, in 1992, all of the Taft Broadcasting Parks were sold to Viacom and re-branded as Paramount Parks. However, Taft only had a minority stake in Australia's Wonderland and sold their stake to other Australian investors.[4] Today, the five Paramount Parks continue successful operation, purchased in 2006 by amusement park operator Cedar Fair.

Many of Australia's Wonderland's rides correlate to the rides at the former Paramount Parks still in operation today. The Bush Beast was identical in layout to the Wild Beast at Canada's Wonderland and Grizzly at Kings Dominion.

The park was sold in 1997 to the Kuala Lumpur, based Sunway Group. Only one ride, Skyrider which was the former cable car at the Sydney Showgrounds, was added between the 1997 takeover and the park's closure.

CEO Stephen Galbraith stated the September 11 attacks, the 2002 Bali bombings, the collapse of HIH Insurance, the SARS virus, the bird flu virus, consistent losses on the Asian financial crisis, the collapse of Ansett Australia, the Iraq War and the 2003 bushfires all contributed to the park's closure.[5] Sydney Morning Herald stated that Sunway Group "blames Wonderland's demise on everything except poor management".[5][6]

The gates shut for the last time on 26 April 2004,[7] the day after the Anzac Day public holiday, and a complete demolition of the park was undertaken in September 2005. Most of the rides were sold to other amusement parks, while 'The Bush Beast', 'The Beastie' and 'The Snowy River Rampage' were demolished. A former employee made a list of what happened to some of the rides.[8] Two of the park's camels were adopted by a family in Goulburn.[9]

The entry way signage at the time of closure, featuring Spider-Man and The Incredible Hulk, was sold to a junkyard in Londonderry in Sydney's north west.[10]

The site itself has since been turned into Interchange Park, an industrial estate, where remnants of the park remain in the surrounding bushland. One of the streets through the site retains the name "Wonderland Drive".

There was a miniature golf course called Top Cat's Putt Putt Park; prior to the installation of Fred Flintstone's Splashdown there was a putting course known as Old McScrappy's Golfing Farm.

The closure of several rides in 2002 was due to the reduction in operational area of the park. Visitors were told that the rides were being relocated to the remaining sections, so that they would be closer (as the rides were spaced apart). Some of the rides were moved, whereas others were scrapped.

Produced by Kings Entertainment Company. Park Musical Supervisor for the 1985–1986 opening season was Derek Williams.[17][18]

Rebuilding proposal

[edit]

Property developer, and former employee of Wonderland Sydney, Ammar Khan, announced plans to develop a new amusement, entertainment and retail attraction to be named Sydney’s Wonderland in Western Sydney and has been seeking financial backing for the relaunch since 2009. Plans for the park include a water park, a wildlife park and the return of the Wonderland.[26] While Khan does not have a site for the Park he plans that it would occupy a site around 300 acres in and around Eastern Creek or towards Hoxton Park. According to Khan, the construction of the Park would take three years.[27]In September 2015 the proposal received financial backing with a $1 billion cash injection from a consortium of investors via the multinational, Fox Petroleum Limited but there has been no further action on the project since then.[28]

  1. ^ Mother's Consumer Guide to Australia's Wonderland Sydney Morning Herald 5 January 1986 page 52
  2. ^ 'Wran Opens Wonderland'. Staff Newsletter Vol.1 No 1. (New South Wales, Australia).
  3. ^ Alex B. (12 October 2004). 'A visit to Wonderland 12/10/2004 after closure'. Wonderland History. (Australia)
  4. ^ [1] 'Taft/KECO/Paramount Parks'
  5. ^ a b Smith, Alexandra (17 February 2004). "The lights go out at Wonderland, where millions got their thrills". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 14 July 2010.
  6. ^ McNally, Gillian. Sydney’s long lost amusement parks Daily Telegraph
  7. ^ "Wonderland Sydney Closure". Parliament of New South Wales. 17 February 2004. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  8. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). wonderlandhistory.net. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 December 2008. Retrieved 15 January 2022.{{[cite web](/wiki/Template:Cite%5Fweb "Template:Cite web")}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^ Saurine, Angela (20 January 2009). "Australia's loneliest camel gets a new home". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 14 July 2010.
  10. ^ "Wonderland History: Demolition Timeline". Wonderland History. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  11. ^ "Theme Parks, Australian Theme Parks | Parkz – Theme Parks". Parkz. Retrieved 27 February 2017.
  12. ^ "Zoomerang". Roller Coaster DataBase. Retrieved 14 July 2010.
  13. ^ "Zoomerang". Coastergallery.com. Retrieved 14 July 2010.
  14. ^ Tomberlin, Michael (5 December 2004). "New steel roller coaster rocketing to Visionland". Birmingham News. p. 21A. Southland Entertainment Group purchased the 1,000-foot-long (300 m) coaster from a park in Australia
  15. ^ (12 June 2009). 'Australia's Wonderland Sydney – Space Probe'. YouTube.
  16. ^ 'The Zodiac'. Wonderland History. (Sydney, Australia).
  17. ^ a b Skiffington, Toni. (1 February 1997). 'Derek came out to find success and become a role model'. Pages 14-15 (double full page). The Daily Post (Rotorua, New Zealand)
  18. ^ a b (1985–1986). Solid Gold show – Gold Nugget Theatre. Wonderland Sydney. YouTube. (Australia).
  19. ^ 'Australia's Wonderland Sydney – Blinky Bill Show'. YouTube. (Sydney, Australia)
  20. ^ "Tony Laffan's Biography". Platinum Speakers. (Sydney Australia).
  21. ^ Webster, Sue-Ann. (3 September 2000). '15. Women in Magic'. Alan Watson. (New Zealand).
  22. ^ 'Action Man Lives' Wonderland History. (Sydney, Australia).
  23. ^ 'Tooheys Tall Ship, The Buccaneer'. Wonderland History. (Sydney, Australia).
  24. ^ 'Gala Celebrity Nite: Wonderland Sydney'. YouTube. (Sydney, Australia).
  25. ^ (1985–1986). Gold Nugget Theatre Solid Gold. Gold Nugget Theatre signage. Wonderland History. Australia's Wonderland.
  26. ^ "Sydney's Wonderland to be a superpark on par with Gold Coast's theme park strip". Anna Hitchings, Mt. Druitt/St. Mary's Standard. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  27. ^ "Sydney's Wonderland theme park set to make its home in the west". Anna Hitchings, Mount Druitt/St Mary's Standards. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  28. ^ "Wonderland revival gathers pace". Nine News. 16 September 2015. Retrieved 27 February 2017.