See the Pics: World’s Largest Legoland To Open With Replica Shanghai Skyline

By Reuters, MiNDFOOD

People visit Legoland Shanghai Resort for the pre-opening. Photo / Reuters
People visit Legoland Shanghai Resort for the pre-opening. Photo / Reuters
One of the star attractions at Legoland Shanghai, which officially opens on July 5, is likely to be a mini replica of the Shanghai waterfront and skyscrapers of the Lujiazui financial district, all built in the colourful plastic bricks.
A Lego recreation of Shanghai’s waterfront. Photo / Reuters

The Shanghai resort, which will be the world’s biggest Legoland so far and the first in China, features eight themed sections that will feel familiar to fans of Lego. They include Ninjago, Lego Friends and Monkie Kid lands, in which classic Lego pieces are brought to life and supersized – though not big enough to meet everyone’s expectations.

“I thought it would be huge, but it turned out to be half of the scale I dreamed … But the attractions are beyond my expectation,” said Lyu Xiaole, a very grown-up seven-year-old whose family were among those able to get limited tickets for a pre-opening visit on Friday.

A rollercoaster within the new park. Photo / Reuters

China’s economy has been hit by weak consumer spending in recent years amid a prolonged property slump and high youth unemployment, but Legoland Shanghai will be counting on resilient domestic travel and “experience” spending which have remained strong.

Legoland Shanghai is operated by a joint venture between Merlin Entertainments, which runs Legoland parks around the world, and the Shanghai Jinshan District local government.

The replica of downtown Shanghai and the city’s waterfront is housed in the “Miniland” building at the site, where skyscrapers face the colonial era splendour of buildings along Shanghai’s famed Bund promenade.

Part of the ‘miniland’. Photo / Reuters

The Miniland creations took 168,000 hours to complete, using more than 20 million bricks.

“I think it’s best to play Lego in Legoland because I have much less Lego at my place,” said seven-year-old Shen Jieqi.

The theme park  includes over 75 interactive rides, shows and attractions as well as thousands of Lego models crafted with more than 85 million LEGO bricks across eight immersive ‘lands.’

Lego Monkie Kid Live show features numerous puppeteers and a 3.7m-tall Demon Bull King puppet operated by three puppeteers.

Photo ops abound at the new Legoland. Photo / Reuters

Am adjacent Lego hotel offers Lego-themed rooms, interactive installations, play zones, swimming pools, and character entertainment.

Lego, the Danish family-owned toymaker that produces the bricks, is a familiar name in China where it has more than 400 stores.

Larger scale Lego zones in the park. Photo / Reuters

In Shanghai, Legoland will offer another leisure space in the city for those who can afford it. Tickets will start from 319 yuan ($75 NZD / $69 AUD) in low season and up to 599 yuan on peak days.

“We came very early in the morning. The atmosphere in the park is very joyful. The staff are full of passion,” said Huang Xuanhua, 44, who lives close by the resort in Shanghai’s Jinshan district and visited on Friday. “It has been a joyful day.”

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