Investment in an entertainment park will lead to development in the real
estate and tourism sectors, international experts have said.
"Demand for an entertainment park is huge in Vietnam , but
government policies haven't encouraged investors for the industry," said
Pham Trung Luong, deputy head of the Tourism Development Research
Institute under the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism.
Luong spoke yesterday at the Vietnam International Real Estate and
Entertainment Connections conference and exhibition held in HCM City on
June 12.
Gary Goddard, CEO of Goddard Corporation, who
also spoke at the conference, pointed out that a successful project,
first and foremost, required an excellent idea but also good design,
services, marketing, target-market understanding, and knowledge of
customer interests as well as the investment environment in a country.
The idea must be appropriate to the country, and the project should have the best location at a reasonable cost, he added.
"An entertainment park should be unique with enough differences to serve targeted customers with the best quality," he added.
For the last 20 years, the Asian entertainment park industry has grown
strongly, and is now considered the top entertainment park centre in the
world.
In 2010, the number of customers who visited Asian
entertainment parks rose 7.3 per cent, much higher than 1.8 percent in
the US .
This year, 290 million people are expected to visit Asian entertainment parks, compared to 249 million in 2007.
At the conference, experts noted that Vietnam does not have a major
entertainment park for several reasons: unstable policies on land
development, no incentives for entertainment park construction,
cumbersome procedures, weak management abilities and poor-quality human
resources for the industry.
"The Government, however, has
approved master planning for 40 national tourism spots, and we welcome
investors in entertainment park in those places," Luong added.
He said that some parks in the south can meet entertainment demand for local tourists, but not in the north.
"We also recognise that entertainment parks increase value for real
estate and attract more both local and international tourists to
Vietnam ," he added.
The conference, organised by the
Vietnam Real Estate Association and G4B company, discussed two
investment models, including 100 per cent ownership and franchising.
Under the first, the investors will control all construction, including
a shopping mall and residential areas, with total investment of 20-50
million USD.
Under franchising, the investors will own the
land and infrastructure, and then co-operate with others to build
entertainment parks, shopping malls and residential areas.
In Vietnam , the best model will be a mixture of the two, part ownership and part franchising, he said.
Because the park will require a huge land plot and must be located near
an urban area, experts suggested that Vietnam develop family
entertainment centres with a focus on entertainment related to history,
education, science, ecology, water recreation and agriculture.-VNA