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By Juliet Chung, Times Staff WriterLaTimes.comSix Flags is making plans to grow while hinting it may shrink.Mark Shapiro, the theme park operator's new chief executive, announced Tuesday that Magic Mountain in Valencia would unveil the world's tallest and fastest "flying" roller coaster in the spring.But he also suggested that the company would reduce its real estate holdings, which he termed excessive, based on the results of a report it commissioned that is due at the end of next month."We're going to evaluate each case," said Shapiro, a former head of programming at cable sports channel ESPN, and decide whether to sell land at some of Six Flags' 30 parks. The report is being prepared by real estate consulting firm Staubach Co., run by former Dallas Cowboys star Roger Staubach."It's a tough question," said Shapiro, who was installed as CEO in December after a months-long proxy battle led by investment group Red Zone.In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Six Flags indicated that as of March 1, it owned the land on which Magic Mountain and 16 other parks sit, totaling at least 6,030 acres.Shapiro's detailing of potential land sales is part of larger plans he has announced aimed at turning around the company. Six Flags, whose parks are known largely for their screaming roller coaster rides, has been on a wild ride of its own recently.Shapiro and Washington Redskins owner Daniel Snyder, who founded Red Zone, took over the company in December after ousting its management. The new executive team has made a rapid series of announcements that aim to reverse the revenue and attendance declines that Six Flags parks have suffered since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, though Shapiro said Tuesday that both categories improved last year. The plans include expanding the parks' roster of characters (hello, Batman and Robin) and implementing family-friendly policies (goodbye, smoking), all part of Shapiro's goal of turning Six Flags into more than a park that attracts sometimes-rowdy teenagers.Six Flags shares, which have been steadily rising since the changeover in management, fell 59 cents, or 5.4%, to $10.27 on Tuesday.Ron Bension, former head of Universal Studios' theme parks, who had been interested in acquiring Six Flags last year, said Shapiro's planned evaluation of the company's real estate was sound and a process his group would have initiated as a management team."There is excess land in many of the parks which is just sitting there, and the real estate has become quite valuable," Bension said. In addition, he noted, because some of Six Flags' properties have been underperforming their competitors, and amusement parks are capital-intensive enterprises, selling underutilized land "just makes good business sense." Because amusement parks tend to be developed in concentric rings, the excess land Shapiro referred to probably lies along the borders of the Six Flags properties, Bension said, adding that they could range from small parcels to hundreds of acres if an entire park is shuttered.Shapiro said Six Flags' first consideration would be to sell excess land rather than close entire parks, as it did recently with AstroWorld in Houston. Still, he did not rule out wholesale closures."I think anytime you acquire or inherit 30 of anything," the chief executive said, "there's a couple that for whatever reason aren't best to keep going the way they are."
QuoteBy Juliet Chung, Times Staff WriterLaTimes.comShapiro said Six Flags' first consideration would be to sell excess land rather than close entire parks, as it did recently with AstroWorld in Houston.
By Juliet Chung, Times Staff WriterLaTimes.comShapiro said Six Flags' first consideration would be to sell excess land rather than close entire parks, as it did recently with AstroWorld in Houston.