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Warner Bros. Movie World Germany

Movie Park Germany
Main Entrance
Slogan Hollywood in Germany
Location Bottrop, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Coordinates 51°37′12″N 6°58′21″E / 51.62000°N 6.97250°E / 51.62000; 6.97250Coordinates: 51°37′12″N 6°58′21″E / 51.62000°N 6.97250°E / 51.62000; 6.97250
Owner Parques Reunidos
Opened 30 June 1996 (1996-06-30) (as Warner Bros. Movie World Germany)
19 March 2005 (2005-03-19) (as Movie Park Germany)
Closed 31 October 2004 (2004-10-31) (as Warner Bros. Movie World Germany)
Previous names Kirchhellener Märchenwald (1967 to 1976), Traumlandpark (1977 to 1985), Das Neue Traumland (1986 to 1991), Bavaria Filmpark Bottrop (1992 to 1993), Warner Bros. Movie World Germany (1996 to 2004)
Rides
Total 38 [1]
Roller coasters 7 [2]
Water rides 4 [3]
Website https://www.movieparkgermany.de/en

Movie Park Germany is a theme park in Bottrop-Kirchhellen in western Germany, 50 km (30 mi) north of Düsseldorf. With an aerial of 40 hectare (98 acres), it consists of 7 areas based on movies and TV series. Nearby the park are several film studios.

The park originally opened under the name "Kirchhellener Märchenwald" in 1967. Märchenpark was run by the German family Allekötter. The park featured attractions consisting of huts in the woods where guests could press buttons to hear audio of different fairy tales.

A couple named Hans and Ida Rosenberg bought the park after the 1976 season. They operated the park under the name "Traumlandpark". This became their second park, the first being the Tuddern safari park in Tüddern, Germany which they purchased from Mr. Löffelhardt and Mr. Schmidt, who sold the park so they could focus on their newest project, Phantasialand. In 1985, the Rosenbergs ran out of money and had to declare bankruptcy with the debt of €22 million.

Wolf-Dieter Jahn from Essen, Germany and Alexandre Berthé from France who previously worked at the park, bought it in 1986 and reopened it in 1987 under the name "Neue Traumland". In 1989 they decided to sell the park to Bavaria Film, and it closed again in 1991.

The park opened on 6 June 1992 under the name "Bavaria Filmpark". This park was originally scheduled to open in May 1991. The park closed in 1993 after not becoming very popular.

In May 1994, Warner Bros. purchased the location, and began construction on "Warner Bros. Movie World Germany". The park had a grand opening on 29 June 1996 with many invited guests including Claudia Schiffer as a special guest. The park opened to the general public on 30 June 1996. Zeitgeist Design and Production's Ryan Harmon served as the Director of Show Development for Warner Bros. International Recreation Enterprises, where he conceived, wrote and managed the design team for Warner Bros. Movie World in Germany's worth of rides, shows and attractions. Botticelli's - Atelier der angewandten Malerei and Sanderson Group were responsible for designing and painting the theming for the park. Alan Griffith Architect was also involved in the park's development.


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Wikipedia

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