Is this new $2 billion US theme park just another fantasy land?

An ostentatious plan to open a $2 billion theme park in Oklahoma grabbed headlines this month. But the announcement ought to raise more questions than hope among theme park fans.

American Heartland announced that it would build a $2 billion theme park resort near the town of Vinita, in northeast Oklahoma. American Heartland Theme Park would feature six themed lands — Great Plains, Bayou Bay, Big Timber Falls, Stony Point Harbor, Liberty Village and Electropolis — with rides and live entertainment throughout. Pasadena-based THG is working on the park’s design, along with FORREC, another experience design firm that has worked on projects for Dollywood and Universal Studios.

American Heartland is an affiliate of Branson, Mo.-based Mansion Entertainment Group, which might be best known to Californians as the sponsor of the grand finale float and show in last January’s Tournament of Roses Parade. Mansion runs a theater in Branson, about 150 miles from its proposed new park, but a $2 billion investment seems a huge stretch for an entertainment company with Mansion’s portfolio.

Looking over the concept art and plans that American Heartland released with its announcement, I am struggling to see where that kind of money would be spent, anyway. That’s more than Miral is reported to have dropped building the new SeaWorld in Abu Dhabi, a 45-acre, multi-story, indoor theme park with best-in-class media and an innovative climate control system that creates polar temperatures in the Arabian desert. The proposed 125-acre American Heartland park would be an outdoor park on farmland, much like dozens of other regional parks across the country.

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