The park includes
shops, restaurants, a marina, and a lodge for overnight
guests. It occupies one-quarter of a man-made island that
was built by the Yokohama city government; the rest of the
island is dedicated to parkland. Recycled earth from city
construction projects was used to reclaim the island from
the bay. The theme park has only 150 full-time employees and
is privately owned. There is ready access by road and
monorail. Less than 1 percent of the park's visitors come by
ferry, which runs twenty times a day. The main market is
Japanese: The park is not promoted overseas, and no
statistics are available on foreign visitors touring the
park. However, Taiwanese tourists are not uncommon, and U.S.
servicemen and their families from a nearby air base do
visit.
My Way-ism and leisure choices
The enormous popularity of theme parks was demonstrated
last summer when a World Theme Park Fair, primarily a trade
show featuring ninety exhibits, was held in Yokohama. Around
150,000 people attended the show during its four-day public
opening. Exhibitors came from Japan and countries that are
popular vacation attractions for Japanese travelers. The
fair was held in direct response to the changing leisure
demands of the Japanese.
 |
| A
warm greeting is offered to all from exhibitors at the
World Theme Park Fair in Yokohama. |
Currently, more than 70 percent of the population lives
in urban areas, and that figure is projected to climb as
high as 85 percent, possibly as soon as the turn of the
century. With that massive urbanization is coming a major
change in popular ways of thinking. As the population is
increasingly successful in its pursuit of material wealth,
unprecedented levels of personal independence are being
established. Greater individual financial security is being
matched by an increasing sense of personal independence.
Loyalty to groups or companies and dependence on those
groups as the basis for all acceptable leisure activities
are declining. Admittedly, this phenomenon is only slowly
emerging; group participation and identification are still
remarkably strong. Vacation parks are crowded with easily
identified groups wearing identical hats, ponchos, or
raincoats, obediently following flag-or board-carrying
guides. Nevertheless, a great many individual or family
visitors can always be seen.