Closure
of Mystery Park is no enigma
November 21 2006
The
demise of the Mystery Park in the Bernese Oberland resort of Interlaken, which
closed on Sunday, is no enigma but the result of bad decisions, experts say.
They argue that the main reasons for the closure are the static nature of
the exhibition, the slow involvement of local tourism and the stock exchange decline
between 2001 and 2003.
"Mystery
Park needs extraterrestrial saviour" and "Career dreamer Erich von Däniken
pulls back" were just two of the sarcastic headlines journalists made in
a long series of negative reports.
The
criticism stepped up in 2005 and was particularly heavy in the spring of 2006
when the park had to ask for a delay in bankruptcy proceedings and protection
from its creditors.
It
all began in 1997 with ambitious plans. Best:selling Swiss author Erich von Däniken
announced he wanted to open a theme park devoted to unsolved (extra:)terrestrial
mysteries on the site of the former local military airport.
As
an international personality and mystery expert whose books have been translated
into numerous languages, von Däniken appeared to be a guarantee that the
park would be managed professionally.
UFO
image
But
Hannes Imboden, the former Bernese Oberland tourism director, said the communications
department of the Mystery Park did not correct the one:sided UFO image that most
people have of von Däniken.
A
similar assessment comes from the current director, Fritz Zemp, who has been at
the mystery park since April 2005.
"The
marketing segment to target was not systematically approached at the outset,"
Zemp said. "What was more important ? entertainment, focusing on the UFO
element of the hard core of von Däniken followers, or learning and education
aspects?"
After
critical financial questions, the park opened its doors in May 2003. As the banks
declined to provide money, the finances came from a group of private investors
and the public who bought shares at a low par value despite the troubles at the
stock exchange.
"Von
Däniken was unable to put into place what he'd really wanted," Thomas
Vaszary, a lecturer at Lucerne's tourism college, told swissinfo.
"It
seemed a bad realisation of von Däniken's ideas. It lacked life and interaction."
At
the beginning Imboden had advised that at least a third of the park's exhibition
should be changeable, a strategy that might have encouraged people to make return
visits.
Lack
of life
Zemp
also felt there was a lack of life in the park. "Technically it would have
been easy to change the software and hardware to counter the statics of the exhibition,"
he said.
Christian
Laesser, deputy director of the St Gallen Institute for Tourism, criticised a
lack of innovation after the park had been built.
He
said that successful parks were those that continuously developed ? like, for
example, the Europa:Park in Rust, Germany. "Only that [kind of development]
maintains a steady flow of visitors," he told swissinfo.
Zemp
said there were many professional providers of tourist services in the Bernese
Oberland ? the Jungfrau Railways, many hotels, adventure firms and tour operators
? that would have been possible partners for the park.
He
said the Mystery Park had only begun very late to offer packages that included
meals and overnight stays.
The
park's financing ran into difficulties and was not helped by falls at the stock
market. There were also groups of small and large shareholders that had different
interests, according to Zemp.
The
fate of the Mystery Park now lies with the liquidator, who Zemp feels will probably
put forward a number of proposals at next month's meeting of creditors.
Insolvency
proceedings are due to end on January 10. If none of the suggestions is accepted
by the creditors, the park will be auctioned.
swissinfo,
Alexander Künzle