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				"I'm in love with this place. The minute I stepped in here I 
				felt like I'm having a sugar rush without eating any sugar," 
				said Guia Weingarten, a young visitor.
 The brightly colored park, created with 350 gallons of paint on 
				a 50,000 square foot parking lot, was meant to be a 
				drive-through experience at the height of the pandemic.
 
 But as lockdown curbs eased, plans changed to allow visitors to 
				linger up close with its oversized unicorns, giraffes and 
				kangaroos, explore its mirrored corridors, and interact with 
				colorfully costumed cast members.
 
 "We like to say that Sugar Rush is Burning Man and Willy Wonka 
				getting together for a radical spin-off and that's what you have 
				here," said Jasen Smith, chief executive of Experiential Supply, 
				who created the park.
 
 The park may seem to be geared toward kids, "but really we want 
				mom, dad, brother, sister that are a little older to come here 
				and really enjoy it," he added.
 
 It was a "surreal experience" for grown-up visitor Jade Alonso. 
				"Everything has been just stay in the car and don't go out and 
				now it's just walking around but safely so it's definitely 
				weird."
 
 "This is a really great, very happy change," said Carine 
				Weingarten.
 
 Sugar Rush, at the parking lot of the Woodland Hills Westfield 
				shopping arcade, is expected to run until May 2.
 
 (Reporting by Rollo Ross; Writing by Richard Chang; Editing by 
				Rosalba O'Brien)
 
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