DisCopper
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2008
- Messages
- 696
I've said this for years, but having just been to see Harry Potter, I'll say it again: Universal is terrible at handling crowds.
In my experience, the wait times are often incorrect. One experience with Revenge of the Mummy: the sign said 45 minutes. We waited 2 hours plus (and that was without breakdowns). Similar experiences on other attractions.
This weekend at Harry Potter, they had the line for Forbidden Journey stretching out of Hogwarts, around the corner, across the bridge, and into Jurassic Park. Once inside, we saw that there were sections of the line that weren't being used. They could have easily pushed that entire line into the castle. I realize parks sometimes do this on purpose. Near the end of the night, Disney will often close off much of the interior line for Space Mountain. People then see the line stretching out the door and assume it's a long wait. But at Harry Potter, this was at 9:30am. All the line was doing was causing traffic problems outside.
Whoever designed the Three Broomsticks was out of their mind. I'm not talking about the theming: it looked AWESOME. But the whole ordering process was crazy. Be directed to which register to pay, then cross a crowd of people to get to where you pick up the food. Then cross the crowd again to carry your food to the dining area. It's clear that no one did any type of efficiency walk-through in the planning process.
Don't get me wrong: I love Universal. I just always come away frustrated that they can't move people well.
In my experience, the wait times are often incorrect. One experience with Revenge of the Mummy: the sign said 45 minutes. We waited 2 hours plus (and that was without breakdowns). Similar experiences on other attractions.
This weekend at Harry Potter, they had the line for Forbidden Journey stretching out of Hogwarts, around the corner, across the bridge, and into Jurassic Park. Once inside, we saw that there were sections of the line that weren't being used. They could have easily pushed that entire line into the castle. I realize parks sometimes do this on purpose. Near the end of the night, Disney will often close off much of the interior line for Space Mountain. People then see the line stretching out the door and assume it's a long wait. But at Harry Potter, this was at 9:30am. All the line was doing was causing traffic problems outside.
Whoever designed the Three Broomsticks was out of their mind. I'm not talking about the theming: it looked AWESOME. But the whole ordering process was crazy. Be directed to which register to pay, then cross a crowd of people to get to where you pick up the food. Then cross the crowd again to carry your food to the dining area. It's clear that no one did any type of efficiency walk-through in the planning process.
Don't get me wrong: I love Universal. I just always come away frustrated that they can't move people well.