Carwardine's Hollywood Adventure

Carwardine's Hollywood Adventure is a production studio and theme park located in,. Primarily themed to movies, and television, it opened on March 17, 2002. It is currently owned and operated by Carwardine Parks and features rides, attractions, and live shows.

Design and construction
In 1997, Christopher R. Carwardine announced plans to open a new theme park in, so that Carwardine Parks could compete with nearby. In 1998, it was announced that the new park would be named, Carwardine's Hollywood Adventure, with a scheduled opening date of 2001.

In September 1999, groundbreaking and construction of the park began. After two years of construction, the park was finished it was scheduled to open to the public on September 18, 2001. However, after the 9/11 attacks occurred just a week prior to the opening date, it was delayed until March 17, 2002, when it finally opened to the public.

Opening
On March 17th, 2002, the park opened to the public, with 75,000 people in attendance, of these, around 65,000 were one-day ticket holders, 7,500 bought season passes specifically for the park, while around 2,500 people had multi-park season passes.

2010s
In 2016, The Great American Western Horses opened.

In 2017, PlayNet Studios opened.

Areas

 * Production Central
 * Coney Island (based on in, )
 * Action Zone
 * Space Zone
 * Kids Kountry (kids land; renamed PBS Kids Neighborhood from 2003-2007, the name changed back to Kids Kountry in 2007)
 * Hollywood's Wild West

Others

 * Coney Funnyhouse (2002; a built-in-house 1930's style funhouse that was similar to Steeplechase Park's Funhouse and Luna Park's Funnyland) [Coney Island]
 * PlayNet Studios (2017; a and theme park attraction run by the television channel PlayNet.) [Production Central]

Flat rides
TBA

Map
TBA

Trivia

 * Space Shuttle was originally planned to be called "Space Challenger", but was later renamed due to potential insensitivity over the Challenger explosion.