World's most visited amusement parks
And some hidden gems if you’re trying to avoid the crowds
![]() Europa Park Europa Park in Germany, which tallied nearly 4 million visitors last year, is based on the idea of a unified European continent. |
|
If travel is escape, then the amusement park may well represent travel in its most concentrated form: a self-contained universe of sundry thrills and happy diversions. It all adds up to a day well-spent, and perhaps so easily forgotten that it just has to be repeated. No one ever said a day at Disneyland would be life-changing, but travel has always been part Silk Road, part Main Street, U.S.A.
A visit to an amusement park has traditionally been the province of families looking for a low-maintenance vacation or vacation-style day away: According to International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions spokesperson Sarah Gmyr, “Amusement parks provide a magical escape from the day-to-day world ... guests can ride thrill rides and scream and then sit down and enjoy an entertaining show.
This shared emotional experience is unique to amusement parks.” Part of the experience may even be slightly educational (It’s a Small World as model U.N.?), but goodness knows it doesn’t have to be (consider the 17 roller coasters at Cedar Point in Sandusky, Ohio).
If the promise of good times minus the burden of advance legwork is a perpetual draw, new attractions have a large role in bringing people back, too. “With constantly evolving and improving park experiences marked by new and innovative rides, entertaining new shows and new services like VIP programs, which allow guests to move to the front of a ride line, you have multiple reasons for guests to visit over and over again,” says Gmyr. The trade publication Amusement Today awarded Cedar Point the honor of best new ride of 2007 for its Maverick coaster; it gave the award for best outdoor night show production to "IllumiNations: Reflections of Earth," at EPCOT at Walt Disney World in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. The awards are based on surveys from hundreds of amusement park fans.
Blackpool Pleasure Beach, Britain’s most popular theme park, was founded in 1896, and some of the rides from its first years of operation, such as the Sir Hiram Maxim Flying Machines, are still in use. But there’s also Bling, a nasty ride that hurls riders 100 feet above the ground and spins them through the air in three directions on giant multicolored gondolas at 60 miles per hour. And this year saw the introduction of Infusion, a suspended looping roller coaster with heart-stopping whirlwind water effects. Nausea-inducing, why certainly, but a bigger hoot than watching the Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace.
|
![]() |
Diana Zalucky / Diana Zalucky, photographer Goofy is seen giving a high-five while riding Cinderella's Golden Carousel during the Little Ones Magic Hour at the Magic Kingdom at the Walt Disney World Resort in Lake Buena Vista, Fla. |
![]() |
Opened in 1843, Tivoli Gardens is now as much a concert venue as it is an amusement park. Last year, Tivoli Gardens had nearly 4.4 million visitors. |
Disneyland Paris is one example of that, but why not take the adventure even further? If you’ve been to Disneyland and you only have three days in Paris, you could spend one of them in the company of Mickey le Souris (that’s French for mouse), but how Parisian is that? Check out Parc Astérix, a modern fantasia on ancient Gaul — one that uses the legendary comic book characters of Asterix and Obelisk as leitmotif — instead, and you’re in for a real homegrown French treat (as well as a couple of roller coasters that give the folks at Disney and Six Flags a run for their money). It’s a pattern repeated around the world, and with that in mind we’ve identified not only the most attended amusement parks in each of 15 countries, but singled out some hidden park gems where you chances are you can have fun times with fewer lines.
(Note: all attendance figures are drawn from the industry-standard TEA/ERA Theme Park Attendance Report for 2006.)
Don't miss these Travel stories from msnbc.com |
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM FAMILY |
| Add Family headlines to your news reader: |
Resource guide





