While Mickey Mouse joined
familiar Disney characters welcoming the crowds,
the Shanghai experience will not be as it was:
Instead of parades and fireworks, there are
mandatory masks, temperature screenings and
social distancing for visitors and employees.
Among the crowd on Monday was Shanghai
Disneyland passholder Kay Yu. "I think (these
measures) make tourists feel at ease," said the
29-year-old, who was wearing a Minnie Mouse hat
and said he had woken up at 4 a.m. to make the
trip to the park.
Disney's $5.5 billion China flagship is the
first of its six resorts around the world to
reopen after the pandemic that has now killed
more than 280,000 people globally threw consumer
service businesses around the world into
turmoil. The reopening may provide a glimpse of
how Disney can begin to recover from closures
set to strip $1.4 billion from the company's
profit.
But the limited scope of the reopening in
Shanghai underlines the scale of that task:
While it welcomed more than 10 million guests in
its first year after opening in 2016, the park
will now restrict visitor numbers to 20% of
daily capacity, or about 16,000 people - far
below a level initially requested by the Chinese
government.
As well as scrapping parades and fireworks -
replacing the latter with an evening light
projection show - Disney has shut interactive
children's play areas and indoor live theatre
shows.
Still, the vast majority of its rides as well as
most of its restaurants and shows will be open,
said Andrew Bolstein, the park's senior
vice-president of operations. More might reopen
in time to come depending on the situation and
government regulations, he added.
Zhang Zhongyu, a 29-year-old passholder and
visitor who works in importing, said the things
he missed most about the park were the shows and
the parade - two attractions that have been
cancelled.
"I'm a little disappointed, but there's nothing
we can do - thinking of the virus, you have to
avoid guests gathering closely, it's
understandable," he said.
'COMING HOME'
Visitors holding annual passes are being asked
to reserve an entry time and day in advance, and
tickets for the earliest days of Shanghai
Disneyland's re-opening have been sold out.
[to top of second column]
|
Monday's guests, mostly parents
with children or young couples, were greeted by
waving park staff as they walked in, having been
asked to show a green health code on their
mobile phones before being allowed in. All wore
masks. Markers have also been
added to areas where people might congregate,
such as shops and entertainment areas, to tell
visitors where and where not to stand, while
audio announcements regularly remind guests to
maintain social distance. Visitors on rides are
also asked to sit well apart.
"It's like a feeling of coming home, I feel
extremely happy," said passholder Yu.
"For us fans it's very meaningful to be here on
the first day of its reopening, and to be able
to experience its reopening, it feels like a
magical day."
Still, the reopening comes after a weekend of
unwelcome reminders that a second wave of the
virus could happen, including the first
confirmed case for more than a month in Wuhan,
the city at the epicentre of the outbreak late
last year.
The number of new cases in China, where the
epidemic first emerged late last year, has
sharply dropped in recent weeks but sporadic
outbreaks continue. Some 17 new COVID-19 cases
were reported for the mainland on May 10, rising
from a day earlier and marking the highest daily
increase since April 28.
Concerns about the virus weren't far from the
mind of Shanghai Disneyland visitor Chen Xue,
31, who works in marketing and said she would
have not come to the park if it were not for the
social distancing measures.
"The virus is still not over and it has made me
so incredibly anxious," she said.
(Reporting by Josh Horwitz; Writing by Brenda
Goh; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |