Vulcania

For the ocean liner, see MS Vulcania.
Vulcania
Slogan The Adventure of the Earth
Location Route de Mazayes, Saint-Ours-Les-Roches, France
Theme Volcano
Owner Regional Council of Auvergne
Operating season All year round
Visitors per annum Approx. 350,000
Website www.vulcania.com
Entrance
Inside the volcanic cone

Vulcania, the "European Park of Volcanism", is an educational Amusement park and museum with a volcano theme. Situated in Saint-Ours-les-Roches, Auvergne, France, 15km north-west of Clermont-Ferrand, it was officially inaugurated in 2002.

History

The project was the brainchild of French volcanologist, Maurice Krafft, who died at Mount Unzen in 1991. Krafft and his work had a great impact on the former President of France, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, who pushed for the construction of the park while he was president of the regional council of Auvergne.

Criticism

The project has faced criticism from its very inception, the strong involvement of the former president added a political dimension to the economic, technical and environmental issues. From an environmental perspective the construction of Vulcania in the heart of the Chaîne des Puys met strong opposition from conservationists. Contrary to this argument, the land had hydrocarbon deposits as the site was formerly owned by the military, therefore the project rehabilitated the land.

Another strong criticism emerged due to the financial losses faced from the over-estimated amount of visitors. In 2004 the park was operating with a deficit of €1.707 million.

Design

The architect behind the design of the park was Pritzker Prize-winning, Austrian Hans Hollein. Three-quarters of the foundations are sunk underground, which aided in the rehabilitation of the land. Visitors approach a 'metaphorical Volcano'[1] by descending down a ramp towards a cone shaped structure clad in dark stone and lined on the inside with a gold metal.

The design incorporates research and conference facilities, large IMAX theaters, green houses to highlight the positive effects of volcanism — fertility — and a restaurant with views out to the whole nature park. The site is secluded and is also utilised for recreation and hiking.[2]

Attractions

One of the attractions at Vulcania is the 4-D film The Awakening of the Auvergne Giants. In 2008 Vulcania opened four new attractions, including the Volcanbul, a GPS-driven robot that gives tours of the area around Vulcania. To quote from the Vulcania Web site "VolcanBul Eco-friendly and innovating the VolcanBul is an electric vehicle guided by GPS." It was specifically implemented to improve the rate of revisits and encourage visitors to spend an entire day exploring the different areas, rather than half-day as is usually the case for museums.

In literature and film

Vulcan is the mythical smithy of the Roman gods, described in Virgil's Aeneid 8:425. It is also the secret base of Captain Nemo in Walt Disney's film version of Jules Verne's novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, but it is not mentioned in the original novel.

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vulcania.


Coordinates: 45°48′48″N 2°56′26″E / 45.813449°N 2.940501°E / 45.813449; 2.940501

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.