Nickelodeon Universe | |
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Nickelodeon Universe | |
Location | Bloomington, Minnesota, U.S. |
Website | Official Website |
Owner | Triple Five Group (owners of Mall of America) (co-owner/distributor) Viacom (1992-2005) Viacom (2005-present) (operated and amused by MTV Networks) |
Opened | Camp Snoopy – August 11, 1992 Nickelodeon Universe – March 15, 2008 |
Previous names | Knott's Camp Snoopy (1992–2005) Camp Snoopy (2005–2006) The Park at MOA (2006–2008) |
Operating season | Indoors, open all year |
Area | 7 acres (28,000 m2) |
Rides | 27+ total
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Nickelodeon Universe (originally Knott's Camp Snoopy, later known as The Park at MOA) is the seven-acre (28,000 m²) indoor amusement park located in the center of the Mall of America (MOA), in Bloomington, Minnesota, USA.
On August 18, 2009, Nickelodeon and Southern Star Amusement announced that the second Nickelodeon Universe would be located in New Orleans, Louisiana and have a tentative opening date around the end of 2010. It was set to be the first outdoor Nickelodeon Universe theme park, but on November 9, 2009, Nickelodeon announced that it had ended the licensing agreement with Southern Star Amusements.[1]
The amusement park is co-owned or distributed by The Triple 5 Group, which is owned by or owner of Mall of America, Inc. and is in a part of the TV channel owner, MTV Networks, a division of Viacom International.
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Nickelodeon Universe is primarily lit by a glass ceiling, which is also the source of most of the heat for Mall of America. It was originally built by the then-owners of Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park, California. The floor has a wide variance in height – the highest ground level in the park is 15 feet (4.6 m) above the lowest. This allows for a far more naturalistic experience than would normally be found in an indoor amusement park.
The park has four small roller coasters, but mainly has flat rides due to space constraints. Near the Rugrats Reptarmobiles is the site of home plate for Metropolitan Stadium, which was previously located on the site of the Mall.
The park was originally known as Knott's Camp Snoopy, and later, simply Camp Snoopy, and was themed around the Charles M. Schulz "Peanuts" comic strip characters. Camp Snoopy themed areas are still located at the following Cedar Fair parks: Cedar Point, Dorney Park & Wildwater Kingdom, Knott's Berry Farm, Worlds of Fun, Canada's Wonderland, Michigan's Adventure, and Valleyfair.
Camp Snoopy was never aggressively themed to the Peanuts franchise; the park had a very outdoors and woodsy feel with more subtle references to the Peanuts franchise. Much of the original theming in the Camp Snoopy fountain and all around the park was already toned down by the time the rights to the Peanuts characters were lost.
Theming that was removed from the park prematurely and was never replaced includes various kites near the ceiling, Charlie Brown and Lucy playing baseball above the Sports Grill restaurant (although their baseball remained suspended in the air afterwards), theming in Snoopy fountain, the retheming of Snoopy Boutique, Snoopy Bouncer, and the Snoopy Shop [2] and much smaller theming.
On April 7, 1998, New Horizon Kids Quest, Inc. opened a Kids Quest hourly child care facility in Knott's Camp Snoopy. The facility incorporated 17,385 square feet (1,615.1 m2) and served children ages six weeks to twelve years until it was removed in 2007.[3]
In 2005, there were plans to revitalize the Camp Snoopy image, and a new logo was introduced in October, called the "roller coaster logo" to replace the "canoe logo". However, this did not last long, as there were even bigger and unexpected changes coming within the next few months.
On January 9, 2006, Mall of America management announced that talks between MOA and Cedar Fair Entertainment Co. (which owns the national rights to amusement-park branding of the Peanuts license) had broken down, primarily over the mall's rights to effectively market its park within and outside the United States, and effective January 19, the park's Peanuts branding would end, the park being temporarily renamed "The Park at MOA" while new branding was being applied. All traces of the Peanuts branding was removed, some very sloppily, although the gift shops were allowed to continue selling Peanuts merchandise without the Camp Snoopy label. The inflatable Snoopy character was removed and it took several months before it was finally replaced by a generic tree house inflatable. Many other landmarks in the park were either replaced by generic landmarks or not replaced at all.[4]
The park's new licensing deal and name, "Nickelodeon Universe", was announced on July 25, 2007.[5] Construction began on August 27, 2007, work was completed in sections so 80 percent to 90 percent of the park remained accessible at all times. Nickelodeon Universe was completed on March 15, 2008.[6]
New rides include SpongeBob SquarePants Rock Bottom Plunge, a Gerstlauer Euro-Fighter style coaster themed after the Nickelodeon show SpongeBob SquarePants, the Splat-O-Sphere, a tower drop-ride in the center of the park, and the Avatar Airbender, a surf-rider attraction located in the center of the park as well and Brain Surge which is on the side of the park. The shooting gallery beneath the Ripsaw/Orange Streak roller coaster was gutted and was replaced by Rugrats Reptarmobiles.
The site of the Mystery Mine Ride was completely demolished to make way for SpongeBob SquarePants Rock Bottom Plunge, a new Gerstlauer roller coaster. This site also included an Old Time Photography studio and restrooms. Old Time Photography relocated into the mall (but not within the park) and restrooms did not return in this section of the park.
Levy Restaurants partnered with Nickelodeon Universe to include a themed restaurant at the park. The restaurant is called EATS and is located in the former Park at MOA food court. Recently, the partnership ended; the EATS area closed and was replaced with a butterfly display.
On March 12, 2008, the Star Tribune reported that the price of ride points, daily wristbands, and, in particular, annual passes, would take a significant price hike once the park transitioned to Nickelodeon Universe. The price for an annual pass, which had remained $99 per year since the park opened in 1992, would increase to $250, and daily wristbands would be raised from $24.95 to $29.95. Some decried the price increases as being unjustifiably high when compared to other parks, such as much larger Walt Disney World at $249.95 and local park Valleyfair at $79.95–$99.95. Others defended the pricing as necessary to accommodate the millions of dollars of investment needed to rebrand the park as Nickelodeon Universe.[7]
Even though the Nickelodeon cable channel changed their logo in September 2009, Nickelodeon Universe still continued to use a variant of the splat logo. The old logo was phased out after the new, all-text Nickelodeon Universe logo was revealed in an ad for the park's New Year's Eve event.[8] The new logo has now replaced all of the old logos on the website, and in the park. However, the stickers made to fasten wristbands still use the original logo.
The park is free to enter, but the rides require patrons to purchase a varying number of tickets (points), depending upon the type of ride. Unlimited single rider wristbands or season passes are also available.
List indicator(s)
- A dark grey cell indicates the attraction was not present in the era.
- Italics indicate the years a removed attraction operated.
Knott's Camp Snoopy | The Park at MOA | Nickelodeon Universe |
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Avatar Airbender | ||
Li'l Shaver | Back at the Barnyard Hayride | |
The Kite-Eating Tree | Tree Swing | The Backyardigans Swing-Along |
Balloon Race | ||
Truckin' | Big Rigs | |
Red Baron | Blue's Skidoo | |
BrainSurge | ||
Americana Carousel | Carousel | |
Screaming Yellow Eagle | Danny Phantom Ghost Zone | |
Camp Bus | Diego's Rescue Rider | |
Skyscraper Ferris Wheel | The Dora and Boots Sun Wheel! | |
Timberland Twister | Fairly Odd Coaster | |
Ghost Blasters | ||
Huff and Puff (1992–1995) | ||
Treetop Tumbler | Jimmy Neutron's Atomic Collider | |
Bloomington Express | Dora the Explorer "La Aventura de Azul"/"Azul's Adventure" | |
Paul Bunyan's Log Chute | Log Chute[9] | |
Mystery Mine Ride (1992–2007) | ||
Bumpers | Naked Brothers Crazy Cars | |
Pepsi Ripsaw | Pepsi Orange Streak | |
Snoopy Bounce | Bounce | Pineapple Poppers |
Rugrats Reptarmobiles | ||
Splat-O-Sphere | ||
SpongeBob SquarePants Rock Bottom Plunge | ||
Speedway | Swiper's Sweeper | |
The Mighty Axe | Tak Attack | |
Frog Hopper | Wonder Pets Flyboat | |
Beagle Ballroom | ||
Linus Loop |
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