Florida Travel

New at the theme parks: Sea turtles, mermaids and minions, oh my!

 

New at the theme parks: Sea turtles, mermaids and minions, oh my!

 

Hollywood Drive-In Golf at Universal CityWalk features two 18-hole mini-golf courses based on classic drive-in era horror and sci-fi movies.
Hollywood Drive-In Golf at Universal CityWalk features two 18-hole mini-golf courses based on classic drive-in era horror and sci-fi movies.
ROBERTO GONZALEZ / UNIVERSAL ORLANDO

mlambert@MiamiHerald.com

The water park opened in late May with most of the former components still in place but with a Lego theme. The Joker Soaker is an enormous interactive play area with slides, water jets and cannons, a Lego joker who sits atop a front section of the structure, and a 300-gallon bucket that fills and dumps water on young guests approximately every two minutes. There’s a Duplo water play area for the youngest kids, a wave pool, a lazy river with rafts that guests can customize with oversized foam Lego bricks (bonus: popular with parents), and cabanas that can be rented for an extra fee. Leftover from Cypress Gardens are two water slide structures that Legoland kept, even though they push the envelope of Legoland’s target age group of 2- to 12-year-olds.

“One of the things we were keen to avoid was we didn’t want this to be a teen water park. We wanted to cater to families,” Adrian Jones, Legoland’s general manager, said the day the water park opened. “Yes, we kept some of the big slides, but most of the elements — Duplo Splash Safari, Build-a-Raft Lazy River — are for families.”

Unlike Central Florida’s other theme parks, which have off-site water parks with separate admission, Legoland’s water park is on the same property. Entry is a $12 add-on to the basic park fee; guests can’t enter the water park without buying admission to the main park.

Also new at Legoland this spring: Warner Brothers Game Zone, where kids can play new Lego video games, including Harry Potter, Sesame Street and a new Batman game; and the Fresh From Florida Greenhouse Tour, where guests learn how Florida produce is grown, harvested and prepared.

DISNEY

Magic Kingdom opened the first phase of its Fantasyland expansion this spring, bringing back older attractions that have been rethemed or newly detailed in the Storybook Circus section: the first of two Dumbo the Flying Elephant rides — this one is the first Dumbo to run clockwise, the other to open in July, will turn counter-clockwise, as is traditional; The Barnstormer at Goofy’s Wiseacre Farm, a gentle family coaster, re-themed as The Barnstormer featuring the Great Goofini; and the Fantasyland Train Station, a stop for the Walt Disney World Railroad, as well as the spot where Dumbo and the rest of the circus comes to town.

The detail on these old favorites is terrific, from the mom-and-baby elephant tracks etched into the asphalt, to the stunt posters of the Great Goofini, to the Carolwood Park sign at the train station, which pays homage to the railroad set that Walt Disney built in his backyard, which in turn was named after the street he lived on.

Coming next to Fantasyland: the Casey Jr. water play area and the second Dumbo, both scheduled to open in July.

Most exciting to Fantasyland fans, however, are two attractions opening late this year: Under the Sea: Journey of the Little Mermaid, and Enchanted Tales with Belle of Beauty and the Beast. They are set in castles with landscaping intricately designed down to the last shard of rock, whether it is sculpted to echo the foreboding character of the Beast or the warm and happy nature of the Seven Dwarfs (except Grumpy, of course). They are surrounded by forest, for, as Imagineer Chris Beatty says, “If you think back about all our stories, the princess always finds herself in the forest, she has her adventure and eventually makes her way back to the castle.”

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The Norton Museum of Art commissioned Dan Parker, a LEGO certified professional, to construct landmarks, including the Seattle Space Needle, from LEGO bricks. The structures are part of the exhibit "Block by Block: Inventing Amazing Architecture" which runs this summer (2013) at the Norton.

    Florida: Norton art museum hosts exhibit of LEGO structures

    At Legoland parks, builders construct entire city skylines of LEGO bricks. In Palm Beach, the Norton Museum of Art saw art in the structures and commissioned Dan Parker, a LEGO-certified professional, to use the bricks to construct landmark buildings from around the world. The structures are part of the exhibit Block by Block: Inventing Amazing Architecture, which opens Thursday and runs through Oct. 20.

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    Central Florida: theme park round-up

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