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History
The chain grew with the acquisition of other parks, such as the Great Adventure Park and Safari in Jackson, New Jersey, and Great America in Gurnee, Illinois, which had been founded by the Marriott hotel chain. The chain of parks changed hands several times, being sold to the Penn Central railroad, then to Bally Construction Corporation, and later on to the Time Warner company, among other owners. The chain is well-known in recent times for large and fast roller coasters, although the queue areas are often in the open air without much shading and without as many props as are typical for some queue areas in Walt Disney World. Image:Sixflags45.jpg Six Flags 45th Anniversary logo- used for 2006 season Six Flags Theme Parks Inc. was purchased in whole on April 1, 1998 from Time Warner by Oklahoma City-based Premier Parks. Premier then began to apply the Six Flags name to a number of smaller parks that had been expanded, including Darien Lake, Elitch Gardens, and Adventure World. In 2000, Premier Parks changed its name to Six Flags, Inc. Headquartered in New York City, Six Flags is now the largest amusement park operator in the United States. Six Flags owes about $2.1 Billion in debt, and they've lost money every year since 1998. Bill Gates owns about 11% of Six Flags and rumors were flying around that Bill Gates' Cascade Investments and Daniel Snyder's Red Zone LLC (which owns 12% of Six Flags) may take it over. Indeed, on August 17, 2005, Red Zone began a proxy battle to gain control of Six Flags' board of directors. On November 22, 2005, Red Zone announced victory in this attempt. After gaining control of the board, CEO Kieran Burke was ousted on December 14, 2005 and replaced by Mark Shapiro, former EVP of Programming at ESPN. Additionally, Six Flags named former Representative Jack Kemp, entertainment mogul Harvey Weinstein, and the former president, Michael Kassan, of the Interpublic Group of Companies Incorporated, a global marketing and advertising agency, to their newly revamped board of directors. During the time Premier Parks owned the company, they attempted to branch out internationally and purchased the "Walibi" branded parks in Europe. Only two in the chain became Six Flags parks; Six Flags Holland and Six Flags Belgium. These parks only lasted three years with the Six Flags name. Six Flags sold the chain to a company called Star Parks in 2004. The parks have since been renamed "Walibi World" and "Walibi Belgium."
On September 12, 2005, Six Flags announced that it was closing its legendary Six Flags Astroworld theme park in Houston, Texas, at the end of the 2005 season, citing issues such as the park's performance, and parking issues involving the Houston Texans football team, Reliant Stadium, and the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo leveraged with the value of the property the park sits on. On January 27, 2006, Six Flags announced it would be selling its Frontier City theme park and White Water Bay water park, both located in Oklahoma City, at the conclusion of the 2006 operating season. At the same time, Six Flags also announced its plan to close corporate offices in Oklahoma City. Six Flags CEO Mark Shapiro said he expects the parks to continue operation after the sale, unlike Six Flags Astroworld. Six Flags also announced that it would be moving all of its corporate operations to New York City. On March 30, 2006, Six Flags announced that it will sell only pizza from Papa John's International at its parks. In turn, Six Flags will receive an annual sponsorship and promotional opportunities from Papa John's, though financial details of the deal have not been disclosed. In June of 2006, Six Flags announced it was considering closing or selling up to six of its parks, including Elitch Gardens (Denver, CO), Darien Lake (Darien, NY), WaterWorld (Concord, CA), Wild Waves and Enchanted Village (Federal Way, WA), Splashtown (Spring, TX), and Magic Mountain (Los Angeles)/Hurricane Harbor (Various). [1] In addition, Six Flags also announced the sale of Wyandot Lake in Powell, Ohio to the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium, which is located next to the park. [2] On January 11, 2007, the company announced it sold seven parks to PARC 7F-Operations Corporation for $312 million to help the company's debt burden. Six Flags will receive $275 million cash and a note for $37 million for four theme parks and three water parks. PARC 7F, of Jacksonville, Fla., is expected to sell the parks to CNL Income Properties Inc., a real-estate trust based in Florida, and then lease them back. Six Flags sold Darien Lake, Elitch Gardens, Frontier City, White Water Bay, SplashTown, Waterworld USA, Wild Waves, and Enchanted Village. The company decided not to sell Magic Mountain and its adjacent water park. Spokeswoman Wendy Goldberg said that upon further evaluation, the company decided that the Los Angeles parks remained too valuable to let go as season passes and sales were up. Current PropertiesUnited StatesCalifornia
GeorgiaIllinoisKentuckyLouisianaMaryland
MassachusettsMissouriNew Jersey
New YorkTexas
CanadaQuebecMexicoFederal DistrictFormer PropertiesImage:SFAWlogo.gif Former Six Flags AutoWorld logo
Properties Sold to PARC 7FThese properties are a Six Flags Park, only with a different owner.
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