from The Christian Post::Sept. 18, 2008
New Bible Park Location Confirmed
After being chased out by the community surrounding the first proposed
location in Tennessee, the Bible Park has finally found its new home in
Wilson County.
The “edutainment” theme park that boasts a mixed
offering of education and entertainment through visual exhibits of
Bible stories from both the Old and New Testaments will be located 30
minutes from downtown Nashville.
Some of the featured attractions will include a Bible Land Fly-Through
indoor ride, an indoor Exodus Experience featuring the parting of the
Red Sea with high-tech standing 25-foot waves and image projection,
recording studios for church choirs and a recreation of
Noah’s Ark, according to Bible Park USA's Web site.
Lebanon and Wilson County officials are officially announcing the
details Thursday afternoon, according to the Murfreesboro Post.
The announcement comes just a week after the original developer of
Bible theme park, New York-based investment firm SafeHarbor Holding,
passed the reigns of the massive project over to Hollywood-based
Entertainment Development Group.
EDG is an entertainment consulting and management firm that guides the
development of large-scale projects, including hotels, water parks,
theme parks, entertainment retail centers, according to the company's
Web site.
The park was originally planned to be built on 275 acres in Rutherford
County's Blackman community but the project faced fierce opposition
from residents in the area who worried the park would bring a host of
unwanted problems to the community such as traffic congestion, noise,
and unwanted commercialism. The Bible Park was subsequently denied a
rezoning request by the Rutherford County Commission.
Additionally, some pastors had also expressed theological concerns
about how the stories in the Bible would be depicted in a
"non-denominational" manner as SafeHarbor Holding's Armon Bar-Tur had
promised.
Following the rejection by Rutherford County, Bar-Tur said in a
statement the company was "overwhelmed" with offers from multiple
counties.
Although developers will probably have to extend the original Easter
2010 deadline of the attraction, everything has worked out so far for
the Bible Park.
Lebanon Mayor Don Fox has said the attraction would boost the area's
tourism market, potentially drawing 2.5 million people to the area.