If you are an adrenalin junkie, you could enter the haunted fort, which contains The Curse of Salimgarh, or maybe play the 4D Mr India game.
The park has taken five years and Rs 1,650 crore (Rs 16.50 billion) of capital in the making and is located near Khopoli, about 90 minutes from Mumbai, on the Mumbai-Pune Expressway.
Only 110 acres of the 300 acres acquired for the park will be used for the rides, the water park, a 300-room hotel and other things. The rest is set aside for further development or expansion.
At Rs 1,650 crore it is media mogul Manmohan Shetty's biggest bet ever on the changing nature of the Indian consumer. From financing parallel films such as Ardh Satya, to the first multiplex, the first Imax, the first chain of digital theatres, Shetty has been a keen investor in businesses where consumer experiences and new media technologies meet.
In 2006, he sold Adlabs (now Reliance MediaWorks) to Reliance. He then started investing in various start-ups in animation, digital technology (Scrabble), television and films (Rajneeti, Tere Bin Laden).
But his heart had been set on a theme park for as long as he can remember. In 2007, he hired PricewaterhouseCooper's Vienna, a specialist in theme parks, to analyse the costs and the potential.
The firm had then estimated it would take $900 million or thereabouts. Though the park is coming up at less than half that cost, even at $900 million it was "viable" says Shetty. But any business plan had to factor in the average ticket prices Indians are willing to pay, and the Indian context.
A theme park such as Ramoji Film City (RFC) on the outskirts of Hyderabad charges Rs 500-600 a head as entry fee. Esselworld is Rs 400-800 a head. They get an estimated 1.2-1.8 million visitors a year. Esselworld is an amusement park, while Ramoji is an integrated film studio, doubling as a theme park.
Adlabs
Mutual fund asset base rises by Rs 2 trillion in 2012
Reliance Group, China's Wanda to form township JV
Thomas Cook India eyes M&As
Kickstart your animation career with these diplomas!
The man who made Tata Group a $100 billion EMPIRE