is the original function of Ontario Place any different?
Perhaps not so much, except, it was relatively unique for its time (there was no Cinesphere (IMAX) anywhere else as an example.
It was publicly owned and operated. The price was set based on it being non-profit was broadly affordable.
Admission in 1971 was $1; and $1.50 for adults in 1972 (after OP lost significant money in its first year)
Youth were .75c
In today's money (as per the Bank of Canada Inflation Calculator that would be $10 per adult and $5 per youth)
I expect pricing will be considerably higher here, though we don't yet have all those details.
I did not the pricing of Therme's German Park near Munich above.
Ecorecreo as a group doesn't seem to operate anything exactly like what they propose here, so pricing is difficult to gauge.
And why is a regional entertainment option an inherently bad thing?
I wouldn't say that it is; I simply wouldn't consider it a given or a necessity. Its something to be considered; I don't happen to care for this particular proposal set on a number of levels.
And what is truly a large enough destination to draw globally?
I clearly identified Disney World and pointed out that this is not that (nor could it be, nor should it be)
My point wasn't that this needed to be Disney World; my point was that it could not; and that arguments being used in support of it around economics are, to my mind, tenuous; because they are arguments that
would work IF this was Disney World; but do not when it is not.
Ontario Place is not going to be a vast money maker and that should not be the aim.
Were it to be highly profitable for private business; that's a further problem in my mind, since its a public asset.
I don't want that standard applied to the Toronto Islands or High Park.