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Ocean Park Hong Kong

Ocean Park Hong Kong, commonly known simply as Ocean Park, is an animal theme park in Hong Kong. Covering an area of 91.5 hectares in Wong Chuk Hang, it is the largest theme park by area in Hong Kong, and is also the city's second oldest theme park, after the now-defunct Lai Chi Kok Amusement Park.

History and development
Planning and opening Conception Ocean Park was originally conceived as a marine life centre. In August 1967, the British Hong Kong government offered to provide a free land grant for the project. The site was located at Brick Hill in Aberdeen and occupied . The grant cost about million. In May 1971, it was announced that the oceanarium would come under the Hong Kong Jockey Club, which provided million of funding. During its preparatory stage in the 1970s, Ocean Park first experienced two major die-offs caused by outbreaks of infectious diseases. In 1974, the park received 20 Pacific bottlenose dolphins acquired from Izu Peninsula in Japan. Its board of directors is appointed by the government. The Jockey Club established a million trust to ensure the park's continued development. At present, Ocean Park is managed by the Ocean Park Corporation, a financially independent, non-for-profit organisation. 21st century Ocean Park had maintained an income surplus since its opening, until the 1997 Asian financial crisis, which resulted in four consecutive years of deficits totalling million. The park briefly recovered in the 2001–2002 financial year, recording million in profit and a 23% increase in attendance up to 3.4million. In response, businessman Allan Zeman was brought on as chairman in 2003 by the city's chief executive, Tung Chee-hwa. Half of the park's board was also replaced. The park's Lowland area was to be redeveloped as Waterfront, with three themed attraction zones, respectively featuring an aquarium complex (Aqua City), a tropical aviary (Birds of Paradise), and a port-themed family area (''Whiskers' Harbour). Meanwhile, Headland would be redeveloped as Summit, with four climate-themed attraction zones, named Marine World, Rainforest, Thrill Mountain, and Polar Adventure''. Construction began in November 2006 and would take place in eight phases over the following six years.Hong Kong Disneyland opened in September 2005, and Ocean Park expected up to a 25% decrease in attendance, but the park was not severely impacted in the end. It recorded an average daily attendance of 10,000 during Disneyland's opening period, down from the 11,000visitors during the same time the previous year. Forbes magazine subsequently recognised the park as one of the "10 Most Popular Amusement Parks in the World", and further dubbed Zeman "Hong Kong's Mouse Killer" in 2007. This included the Ocean Express, a funicular system connecting the Waterfront and Summit; Four red pandas were loaned to Ocean Park by the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding. In January 2011, the Aqua City attraction zone was opened. The zone covers an area of and features the Grand Aquarium as its centerpiece. In March 2012, the new attraction zone Old Hong Kong opened, evoking the streetscapes and spirit of Hong Kong between the 1950s and the 1970s from various perspectives. In April, the newly refurbished Hong Kong Jockey Club Sichuan Treasures opened. In July, the final element of the redevelopment, Polar Adventure, opened, featuring animals such as penguins, Pacific walruses, spotted seals, northern sea lions, snowy owls and Arctic foxes, aiming to highlight some of the conservation issues they face. In November 2012, Ocean Park became the first theme park in Asia to win the Applause Award, an award presented by Liseberg and considered the most prestigious in the amusement and theme park industry. The park also received three Brass Ring Awards from the International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions. At opening, the aquarium housed 130 sharks and rays from 15 species, including the critically endangered largetooth sawfish and ragged-tooth shark. Earlier in December 2013, the park had posted a record surplus of million and also a record attendance of 7.73 million for the 2012/13 financial year, up from the million deficit and 2.95 million visitors recorded in the 2002/2003 financial year. On 19 February 2019, the park opened its first hotel, The Hong Kong Ocean Park Marriott Hotel. Financial struggle and recovery In January 2020, the park sought billion from the government for a major upgrade, following a 14% decline in visitor numbers and a cash-flow crisis. The government was ready to support the move, but both pro-Beijing and pro-democracy legislators expressed concerns. On 21 September 2021, Ocean Park opened to the public its brand new water park, named . Occupying an area of , Water World is located near the main park on a hillside in Tai Shue Wan and charges admission separately from the main park. It is Asia's first all-season water park. In December 2023, Ocean Park posted a surplus of million (million) in the financial year ending 30 June 2023, following years of deficits. The number of visitors to Ocean Park and its Water World had a 45% year-on-year growth, up to 2.4million. This turnaround was attributed to the gradual recovery of tourism in Hong Kong, following the full reopening of the city's borders in February 2023 after the end of the COVID-19 pandemic. Future developments Adventure Zone (2024–28) A plan for an adventure zone to replace the Park's Adventure Land area first emerged in 2020, when the Park asked the HKSAR for HK$10 billion to fund its long-anticipated expansion plan, which includes replacing Adventure Land with Adventure Valley and replacing Raging River with a luge track. When this plan was suspended and replaced by the rebirth plan, the concept of Adventure Valley was retained and presented as 'Adventure Zone', but now built and operated by an external operator instead of internally. Some key attractions in the area include a 'X-Raycer', an Alpine Coaster, Ziplines and Tubing. Construction for the area started in late 2024 and the area will be completed in mid 2028. Tai Shue Wan Pier Along with Adventure Zone, the construction of a pier at Tai Shue Wan was also proposed in the rebirth plan to better connectivity between the Resort and the Southern District. A temporary pier, funded by the Ocean Park opened on 8 August 2023, provided good ferry service to and from the Resort during the first few months of its debut. A permanent structure is set to replace the existing temporary boat pier, with construction starting in 2025 and completion later in the decade. Visitor growth The park's expansion steadily grew visitor numbers to 7.6 million in 2014, making it the world's 13th most visited theme park, and one of the largest theme parks in Asia. In January 2017, the Ocean Park saw a 30% surge in visitors, credited to a new rapid transit line, big discounts and an early Lunar New Year holiday, but in 2019, lower numbers of mainland tourist arrivals, due to social unrest and continued competition from Chimelong, sunk attendance to 5.7 million. ==Park layout and attractions==
Park layout and attractions
Ocean Park consists of two main attraction areas, the Waterfront and the Summit. They are separated by the Brick Hill, and thus are connected by a cable car system and by an underground funicular system. Together, the two areas are further subdivided into seven attraction zones, Amazing Asian Animals, Aqua City, Whiskers Harbour, Marine World, Polar Adventure, Thrill Mountain, and the Rainforest. Internal transport Ocean Park features a long cable car system connecting the Waterfront and the Summit in an eight-minute journey, with the views of the South China Sea. It has a capacity of 4,000 passengers per hour with 252 cable cars on two pairs of ropeways. Each car can hold six passengers. The system is considered a signature of the park. The Waterfront and Summit areas are also connected by the Ocean Express, a tunnel funicular system that opened on 9 September 2009. Each train carries up to 250 passengers and has 40 seats. They are themed to resemble submarines, featuring dimmed lights and animations playing on ceiling panels to simulate an underwater environment. It was previously the world's longest outdoor escalator system, until the completion of the Central–Mid-Levels escalators in October 1993. The Summit Marine World This area was formerly known as two distinct areas: Marine Land and Headlands Rides. • Pacific Pier – Mimics the rocky habitat of harbour seals and California sea lions on the Northern Californian coast. • Ocean Park tower • Sea Jelly Spectacular – Opened in 2006. Southeast Asia's first standalone sea jelly exhibit. • Flying Swing • Wild Twister – A Mondial Ventura • Crazy Galleon – A Huss Pirate ship • Ferris Wheel • Marine World Games Zone Thrill Mountain Thrill Mountain was opened in December 2011 and occupies . The area is carnival-themed, and features five rides and six booth games. • Hair Raiser – A floorless rollercoaster built by B&M with four inversions. • Whirly Bird – A chair swing ride that soars into the air • Bumper Blaster – Bumper cars that can carry two in each car • Rev Booster – A spinner ride • The Flash – A swing ride that goes upside down, with a top speed of , at a height of up into the air Polar Adventure Polar Adventure was opened on 13 July 2012. The area features the North Pole Encounter, South Pole Spectacular and Arctic Fox Den, as well as the Arctic Blast roller coaster. The attraction's carbon footprint is reduced through environmental technology, including a ventilation system that recycles residual cool air to cool down the Life Support System (LSS) and plant room area before being discharged, which it is claimed reduces electricity consumption by a third. • Arctic Blast – A steel "roller coaster" located in the Polar Adventure with various dips and side turns. It is suitable for the whole family. • North Pole Encounter – visitors can meet Pacific walruses and spotted seals, and other animals from the North Pole including Steller sea lions and snowy owls. The animals can also be viewed via an underwater tunnel. • South Pole Spectacular – It is home to three penguin species: king penguins, southern rockhopper penguins and gentoo penguins. The viewing chamber, glass-panelled floors, walkways and balconies overlooking the water allow visitors to see the penguins from different angles. • Arctic Fox Den – visitors can see Arctic foxes here to learn about their behaviour and the impact of humans on their habitat. The Rainforest The Rainforest was opened on 14 June 2011. Dozens of avian, terrestrial and aquatic animals living inside buttress roots accompany visitors on their immersive exploration of biodiversity. Prepare to be soaked on The Rapids, as water guns and sudden drops will get you wet from head to toe. • The Rapids – A family river rapids ride along a rushing river that surrounds the themed zone. • Expedition Trail – A walk-through rainforest exhibits where, visitors can meet some of the world's most striking tropical species, including Linnaeus's two-toed sloths, kinkajous, capybaras, toco toucans, green anacondas and more. • Rainforest Why Zone – Trainers explain about rainforest animals in the wild and in captivity. The Waterfront Aqua City Aqua City was opened on 26 January 2011 and occupies around 200.000 square feet. It features: • Grand Aquarium – Inside the Grand Aquarium, visitors can get up close to some 5,000 fish from over 400 species, such as the scalloped hammerhead and reef manta ray. Strolling through the Reef Tunnel and Panoramic Ocean Gallery, visitors can see the world's largest viewing dome in an aquarium, at 5.5 metres in diameter, and a 13-metre acrylic viewing panel, one of the largest in the world. It also features the world's first and only 360° water screen show Symbio! and Hong Kong's only restaurant inside an aquarium. • Sea Life Carousel – Hong Kong's largest carousel, 15.1 metres across, with 61 carriers in 13 different designs inspired by endangered sea animals, holding up to 81 passengers. • Old Hong Kong – Offers an immersive experience of culture, history, and delicacies of Hong Kong between the 1950s and the 1970s. It features a replica of Edinburgh Place Ferry Pier's clock tower and its signature toll, a manually retrofitted heritage tramcar and rows of tong lau-style apartment buildings. Visitors can also try more than 70 types of local street food and beverage that evoke the flavour of old Hong Kong. The area also provides a wide array of classic booth games. • Waterfront Plaza – Features a lively carnival setting with a rotating mix of shows, magic and other acts performed by clowns, acrobats and jugglers. This area sets the backdrop for many of Ocean Park's festive events. Amazing Asian Animals • Giant Panda Adventure – A purpose-built habitat that houses 2 rare giant pandas - Ying Ying, and Le Le as well as red pandas. It also houses the critically endangered Chinese giant salamander. • Panda Village – displays Asian small-clawed otters and a variety of Asian bird life in a woodland setting. • Gator Marsh – A wetland setting, featuring endangered Chinese alligators from the Yangtze River. • Goldfish Treasures – A goldfish pavilion featuring the latest and rarest varieties such as the Black Oranda and Blue Phoenix Eggfish. Explains the history and importance of the goldfish in Chinese culture. • Hong Kong Jockey Club Sichuan Treasures – home to two golden snub-nosed monkeys, Le Le and Qi Qi, from Sichuan. Le Le and Qi Qi's offspring, Lokie (born 2017), is the first golden monkey born in Hong Kong and also resides there. The exhibit also acts as a resource centre on the care and conservation of this species. Pandas Jia Jia and An An also once lived there until their deaths. • Emerald Trail – A verdant garden featuring natural settings with flowers, tall trees, stone bridges and gentle pools. Whiskers Harbour Whiskers Harbour, previously called Kid's World, features attractions for younger children, over an area 14,200 square metres. • Balloon Up-up-and-away – A hot air balloon-themed Ferris wheel for very young visitors. • Clown a Round – This merry-go-round has clown cars for younger kids to whirl around in. • Frog Hopper – A kid's version of a thrill ride. Young visitors strap into the mechanised 'frog', hop high into the air and land back on their feet. • Merry-go-round – A classic children's merry-go-round with gilded fairytale horses. • Bouncer House – An inflatable, fully padded, covered house for children to bounce around in. • Whiskers Harbour Playground – A safe, child- (and parent)-friendly haven for kids to run around and explore slides, see-saws, tunnels and jungle gyms. • Interactive Shadow Play – Kids get to play simple spelling and skill games on interactive multimedia screens. Correct answers are rewarded with audiovisual presentations. • Animal Story Corner – Children can explore interactive educational displays about different land, air and sea animals, and what makes each of them distinct. • Whiskers Harbour Games Zone – The area offers over twenty classic arcade games. • Toto the Loco – A small train that takes young visitors through a mini forest to meet clowns playing accordions, cellos and violins. • Little Meerkat and Giant Tortoise Adventure - A newly opened display that shows meerkats and Aldabra giant tortoises in a theme of the African Savannah Former attractions Former attractions of Ocean Park include: • Atoll Reef. It was located in Marine Land (now Marine World). Closed in early 2011 after 34 years of operation, many of the animals were transferred to the new Grand Aquarium. It was converted into Shark Mystique, which houses several species of sharks. • Middle Kingdom. Opened in 1990, this area featured traditional Chinese culture and heritage along with buildings resembling traditional Chinese buildings. It closed in 2001, but the Middle Kingdom Restaurant was in operation until 2007. • The Bird Paradise area, located in Tai Sue Wan near Adventure Land, closed down in 2013. It contained The Aviaries and Flamingo Pond. Plans are underway to redevelop this area into Water World. • Space Wheel: A HUSS Enterprise. Formerly located in the Adventure Land section of the park. • Bungee Trampoline – A trampoline that allows visitors to jump really high while strapped in bungee harnesses. Formerly located in the Thrill Mountain section of the park. • Eagle – A HUSS Condor. • Mine Train () – A steel "mine train" roller coaster perched on the edge of a cliff overlooking Aberdeen Harbour, closed in 31 August 2021. • Raging River () – A log flume-type water ride that took passengers through "tropical waterfalls", narrow ravines and finished by shooting them down a slide at almost 60 km/h, closed in 31 August 2021. • The Abyss – A turbo drop ride, closed in 31 August 2021. • Chinese Sturgeon :Aquarium – Yangtze River Exploration – The 3,500 square-metre freshwater aquarium housed Chinese sturgeons along with other native species of the Yangtze River, closed in 2019. • The Dragon – Arrow Dynamics Custom Looper, was the first rollercoaster to feature a Sidewinder. Closed in February 2021. Rollercoasters Water Rides Flat Rides Transport Rides == Animals ==
Animals
Ocean Park houses 6,515 animals (most of which being fish), down from the 12,344 animals during the same time in 2014. The park has had success breeding rare shark species, the Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin, sea lions, seahorses, penguins, green anacondas, red-handed tamarins, pygmy marmosets, and several species of sea jellies. Endangered birds and butterflies have also been hatched and reared at Ocean Park. Giant pandas In 1999, a pair of giant pandas, a male named An An () and a female called Jia Jia (), were given to Ocean Park by China to mark the 2nd anniversary of Hong Kong's 1997 handover from UK to China. The pair were given permanent homes in the "Hong Kong Jockey Club Sichuan Treasures" area. In 2007, two more pandas were given to Hong Kong to mark the 10th anniversary of the city's handover. The pair of two-year-old pandas, a male called Le Le () and a female named Ying Ying (), arrived at Ocean Park from the China Conservation and Research Centre in Wolong, Sichuan province. After quarantine, they made their first public appearance in the "Giant Panda Adventure" area on 1 July 2007. A new compound was prepared at the park to house them on their arrival. On 28 July 2015, Jia Jia turned 37 years old and was subsequently recognised by the Guinness World Records as the oldest panda currently living in captivity and the oldest panda to ever live in captivity. The previous record was held by a male panda named Du Du, who was kept at Wuhan Zoo in China, and lived to 36 years and 11 months before dying in July 1999. In October 2016, Jia Jia's health condition began to rapidly deteriorate, exhibiting weight loss and a lack of interest in food and fluids. On 21 July 2022, An An was euthanised following age-related health deteriorations. At the age of 35 (about 105 years old in human years), he was the world's oldest male giant panda in captivity. The panda had been withdrawn from public viewing two weeks prior due to health problems. He later also began to refuse solid food and became mostly inactive. The decision to euthanise was made by veterinarians from the park and the government's Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department, following consultation with the China Conservation and Research Centre for the Giant Panda. On 1 July 2024, it was announced that the Chinese government would gift a new pair of giant pandas to Ocean Park in the coming few months, to commemorate the 27th anniversary of Hong Kong's handover. The park first revealed that it was in discussions of requesting two more pandas back in May 2023. The city's pro-Beijing party DAB had previously suggested naming the potential panda pair "Zhizhi" and "Xingxing", meaning 'stability' and 'prosperity' in Chinese respectively, to "symbolise Hong Kong's advance from stability to prosperity". Reproduction efforts In April 2019, Ocean Park considered sending the 13-year-old panda pair Le Le and Ying Ying to the Wolong National Nature Reserve in Sichuan for mating, following poor success with reproduction since their arrival in the park. Panda experts from Sichuan suggested that the panda pair may have poor sexual chemistry, adding that male pandas living in the wild fought each other for the chance to breed with female pandas. The reserve in Wolong is the biggest panda reserve in mainland China and thus offers more potential mates. Ying Ying had previously been sent back there in 2015, where she soon became pregnant but later miscarried. She had three phantom pregnancies in the following years. In April 2020, the panda pair mated with each other for the first time, at the age of 14. This was considered a breakthrough as male and female giant pandas become sexually mature at seven and five years old respectively. See . In July 2009, Domino and Dumisa, two dolphins from Bayworld in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, arrived at Ocean Park. The dolphins, a father and daughter pair, were separated to ensure that they do not mate with each other. They formed part of Ocean Park's breeding programme. , the park houses 19 Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins, following the death of its oldest male, Molly, at the age of 40. Orcas – Hoi Wai and Prince Hoi Wai was a female orca that resided in Ocean Park between 1979 and 1997. Following her capture near Iceland in 1977, she was first kept at other theme parks, including the Dolfinarium Harderwijk in the Netherlands and the now-defunct Windsor Safari Park in Berkshire, England. Hoi Wai arrived in Hong Kong on 28 January 1979, at the age of four, following a 16-hour flight from the UK. Earlier that month, she had been kept at Clacton Pier in Clacton-on-Sea, England, but her tank was suddenly cracked by heavy waves on 1 January. On 13 April 1989, she was joined by a male orca named Prince, who was also captured near Iceland, and had previously been held at Kamogawa Sea World in Japan. Prince died only three years later on 10 July 1991 of gastroenteritis and pneumonia, measuring in length. Some travel websites and social media posts incorrectly state that Hoi Wai's remains are preserved in the Cape D'Aguilar Marine Reserve in Shek O, where a whale skeleton is displayed and which is home to the Swire Institute of Marine Science (Swims) of the University of Hong Kong. Experts have debunked this claim, pointing that the skeleton is too long for an orca, Chinese sturgeons In 2008, to mark China's hosting of the Summer Olympics, Ocean Park was gifted five rare Chinese sturgeons (symbolising the five Olympic rings) by the Chinese government. The Chinese sturgeon is rarer than the giant panda, and is considered a national treasure of China. In December 2019, Ocean Park returned to mainland China the last batch of six Chinese sturgeons. Animal encounter programmes Ocean Park runs a series of programmes called "Get Closer to the Animals" which offer supervised access to its resident animals, from swimming with dolphins to learning to be a panda keeper. Holders of a diving certificate can even enter the Grand Aquarium, while an overnight camp within its dome offers a drier way to view the underwater world. There are behind-the-scenes tours of many facilities, often including the chance to get close to animals such as penguins, seals and other polar animals. Animal mascots Ocean Park introduced a waving sailor sea lion named Whiskers (known as Wai Wai in Chinese) as its major mascot in 2000. Subsequent members of the Ocean Park 'family' include James Fin (a shark), Jewel (a butterfly/fairy), Swift (a dolphin), Chief (a parrot), Professor (a turtle), Later Gator (a Chinese alligator), Redd (a red panda), Goldie (a goldfish), Tux (a rockhopper penguin), and four giant pandas: An An, Jia Jia, Le Le and Ying Ying. In 2015, the older mascots were replaced by a newer set of mascots known collectively as "Whiskers & Friends". The mascots are now depicted in a more simplistic style. Some of the older mascots such as Whiskers and Redd remain mostly unchanged. However, brand new mascots (which are mostly rebooted designs of older animal mascots) are introduced as well. These new mascots include Fluffi (an Arctic fox), Mark (a shark), Justin (a dolphin), Dougie (a rockhopper penguin) and Bao Bao (a giant panda). Though the older mascots are no longer acknowledged by the park itself, traces of them can still be spotted on numerous rides, attractions and objects around the park, with a few notable examples being the Arctic Blast roller coaster, the Flying Swing and the waste containers in Marine World. == Research and conservation ==
Research and conservation
Ocean Park conducts education and research into animal conservation, including through the Ocean Park Conservation Foundation, Hong Kong (OPCFHK), a fund that advocates, facilitates and participates in the conservation of wildlife and habitats, with an emphasis on Asia, through research and education. After the 2008 earthquake in Sichuan, OPCFHK established a Giant Panda Base Rebuilding Fund and donated equipment to the affected nature reserves. Ocean Park has created education programmes, such as the Ocean Park Academy (OPA), begun in 2004, through which the Park runs educational tours for schoolchildren and workshops for teachers from the Hong Kong Institute of Education. Every year, the Park offers over 35 core courses for around 46,000 students on six big topics: giant pandas and red pandas, dolphins and sea lions, birds, fishes, plants, and mechanical rides. Animal rescue and shelter Ocean Park works with the Hong Kong government's Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD) in animal conservation. The park provides shelter for fish, sea turtles, coral reefs, and other illegally imported or abandoned wild animals that were rescued or confiscated by the AFCD. From January 2000 to April 2023, the park returned more than 70 rescued sea turtles to the ocean after providing them with medical treatment. Through its Conservation Foundation, the park also handled and analysed more than 600 cetacean stranding cases with the AFCD from January 2006 to April 2023. In 2013, Ocean Park adopted two Arctic foxes that had earlier been confiscated by the AFCD. The foxes were originally from mainland China and were added to the park's existing Arctic Fox Den. In August 2014, one of these two foxes, a female named Mochi, gave birth to a litter of six pups, including four females and two males. These were the first Arctic foxes to be born in Hong Kong. In April 2018, Ocean Park adopted two Asian small-clawed otters that had been discovered in a smuggling case earlier in January. The park named the otters "Si" () and "Fun" (), meaning 'hour' and 'minute' in Cantonese respectively. Fun later became pregnant, and the pair became parents to quadruplets in August. The offspring, three female and one male, were also given names associated with time – "Miu" (, 'second'), "Centi" (short for centisecond), "Milli" (short for millisecond), and "Mei" (, 'micro', short for microsecond). The female crocodile, then measuring in length and weighing , It was later confirmed by DNA testing to be a hybrid of the Siamese crocodile and Cuban crocodile, and was estimated to be four to five years old in March 2024. Following an online poll featuring names suggested by the public, the crocodile was named "Passion" in English, short for passion fruit, whose Cantonese name () is pronounced like Pat Heung (), the area where it was found. The crocodile was also made an animal ambassador of the park. Since 16 March 2024, it has been exhibited in a purpose-built habitat named "Croco Land". Artificial insemination Bottlenose dolphin In May 2001, Ocean Park became the first in the world to successfully breed dolphins via artificial insemination, following a 12-year research project. Two calves, one male and one female, were delivered nine days apart by two pregnant bottlenose dolphins, 22-year-old Ada and 20-year-old Gina. According to a senior veterinarian at the park, artificial reproduction techniques were considered as the park's cownose rays had poor success with reproduction and were sometimes born dead. One female ray was born following 61 weeks of gestation, longer than the 47–53 weeks typical of its species. The birth was later confirmed to have resulted from the artificial insemination and not from parthoenogensis. Named "April" after her birth month, the female ray turned eight months old in December 2023, and is publicly exhibited with a male ray in the park's shark and ray pool. The park intends on extending the breeding program to other elasmobranchs. Criticism Ocean Park has been criticised by wildlife advocates for certain practices including the wild capture of large sea animals, such as dolphins and orca, and the presentation of shows featuring such animals performing. Opponents have highlighted their views on international "Empty the Tanks" day – a non-violent multinational demonstration that aims to end the capture and sale of wild dolphins to marine parks, where the creatures are said to die younger and breed much less. There is concern for the psychological state of the mammals alongside their physiological needs. And the advocates say it sends the wrong message, not only to visitors but also to marine parks in mainland China, which, if they copied the Park's practices, could have a significant impact on wild populations. == Major annual events ==
Major annual events
Ocean Park hosts six major events throughout the year: an Kidsfest, Animal in High Definition Month, the Ocean Park Summer Splash, the Halloween Bash and Christmas and Chinese New Year celebrations. Halloween Fest (Mid-September to Late October) Since 2008, the Park has held a popular annual Halloween Bash through the month of October. Themes such as "Fear Formula" and "Haunted Hong Kong" provide modern twists on the traditional halloween rituals, including various attractions and activities. Ocean Park Summer Splash (July–August) The event is held each summer, with visitors partaking in various wet and wild thrills, including water games and water slides. Christmas Sensation (December) Christmas themed celebrations held from December to January every year. Chinese New Year Fiesta (January/February) Chinese New Year celebration events are held around January to February every year. The celebration usually features lantern displays, God of Fortune visits, lion and dragon dances. In 2013, the CNY Fiesta featured a 12-metre spinning lantern, as well as a traditional Chinese drum show. Animal in High Definition Month (discontinued) The Animal in High Definition Months enable visitors to encounter a variety of rare animals up close, with educational experts on hand to disseminate information about these creatures. The Animal in High Definition Month for 2010 had a reptile theme called, "Mighty Dragons". In 2012, the event let visitors explore Chinese national treasures, featuring the display of two Sichuan golden monkeys. == Attendance ==
Incidents
• On 5 December 2010, seven were injured on the park's Ocean Express railway when a train driver triggered the emergency braking system by mistake. This abruptly stopped both trains of the system, which carried 107 passengers total at the time. A 70-year-old man suffered facial injuries and was in critical condition. Each train carries up to 250 passengers and has 40 seats, which are not equipped with seat belts. This was the first incident involving the Ocean Express since its opening in September 2009. • On 5 September 2016, a 3-year-old boy lost a toe after his left foot was trapped in the park's escalator. The boy's pregnant mother was forced to drag him out after failing to stop the escalator, which was not equipped with emergency shut-off buttons or sensors in the middle as required by safety regulations updated in 2012. The boy was sent to Ruttonjee Hospital 49 minutes later and received treatment after another 30 minutes. • On 10 August 2025, 17 passengers on board the ride were left stranded mid-air for over an hour due to a signal failure. All riders were rescued safely. • On 30 March 2021, 14 passengers on board the ride were left stranded mid-air for at least six minutes after it malfunctioned. All riders safely evacuated. • On 24 May 2025, the observation tower was suspended after its safety protection system activated due to a signal failure. Ride operators assisted all 17 passengers in exiting after an hour. == Access ==
Access
Mass Transit Railway Ocean Park station on the South Island line is located adjacent the main entrance of the park. The station opened on 28 December 2016 and connects Ocean Park directly to Hong Kong's MTR system, from Admiralty station. Bus The Citybus Ocean Park Express (Route 629) used to provide departures from Central Piers to Ocean Park only. This route has since stopped its regular service due to a decline in passenger numbers. Passengers may use any of the Aberdeen Tunnel bus routes and walk to the park from the Aberdeen Tunnel Toll Plaza bus stop. Car The venue is also accessible by taxi, private hire car or personal car. The park provides some car park spaces close to the main entrance, however, the car park can be busy during peak times. Road access is via Route 1 (Aberdeen Tunnel) from central and eastern districts of Hong Kong Island, Kowloon, New Territories or Pok Fu Lam Road from western districts. == See also ==
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