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October 2007
 Vacation Bible School... on Speed
 A developer looks to bring the Old and New Testaments to a mass audience via Rutherford County
 By Donnie Snow

Consider the dashboard Jesusfor some, a subtle reminder of an omnipresent savior; for others,
a cheesy religious trinket. Now imagine a $200 million-dollar dashboard Jesus the size of Dollywood
with the glamour of Disney situated down the street and you understand how the unofficially proposed
Bible Park USA in Rutherford County sparked controversy the moment rumors began circulating last
spring about a 200-acre Christian theme park being built in the middle of one of the fastest growing
communities in the country. Prematurely leaked news of the park created an audible uproar as
citizens launched Web campaigns complaining its creation could have myriad unappetizing results,
including devaluing property rates, drawing tax revenue from schools and damming up traffic in the
decreasingly bucolic community of Blackman. Developers SafeHarbor Holding delayed submitting a
proposal to the county planning commission hoping a redesign in the preplanning phase might quell
the discord. (They expected to submit a formal proposal, admittedly months overdue, as this issue
went to press.) Described as an edutainment "story park," Bible Park USA highlights
include: - The Bible Land Fly-Through an indoor ride featuring "IMAX-like"
surround imagery
- The Exodus Experiencean indoor "experience" with a parting
of the Red Sea, flaming torch and booming, God-like voiceover
- Noah's Arka
recreation theatrical area with live animals
- Galilean Villagea live-acting
village where visitors partake of "authentic Biblical foods" and experience otherwise every day
life in Galilee 2000 years ago
The description makes it sound like the Jimmy Lee
Farnsworth Christian theme park in the Chevy Chase flick Fletch Lives, but the
résumés of Bible Park's planners and designers are impressive. SafeHarbor, currently
finishing the $400-million Hard Rock Café Park in Myrtle Beach, S.C., hired former Disney/MGM
designers BRC Imagination Arts to design Bible Park USA, along with HOK Sport Venue Event (Oriole
Park at Camden Yards in Baltimore, London's new Wembley Stadium, Nashville Arena and AutoZone Park
in Memphis) and RPM Transportation Consultants (Nashville Arena, the Downtown Nashville
Transportation Plan, Vanderbilt UMC Parking Study). The Park's genesis began with
Israeli-American Ronen Paldi, whose Oregon-based Ya'lla Tours has led pilgrimages through the Holy
Land since 1993. What Paldi noticed, says partner Armon Bar-Tur, was that far more people wanted to
take the tour than could. This led to the idea of bringing the facsimile Holy Land to Tennessee.
"Nashville is one of the largest centers for Christian religious conferences and concerts," British
born Bar-Tur explains. The former Morgan Stanley portfolio manager says the region's central
location, accessibility and growth are the real reasons he chose Rutherford, about 35 miles
southeast of the capitol. "It's one day's drive from most of the country." SafeHarbor co-founder
Bar-Tur plans to capitalize
on the region's current robust tourist trade, but also expects to tap
into a nascent religious entertainment tourism that's prompted the creation of destinations like
Holy Land Experience in Orlando, Fla., and even the Creation Museum in Petersburg, Ky. Despite the
Christian similarity, there are major differences between the destinations, namely size, profit and
proselytizing. Both Kentucky and Florida ventures are nonprofits funded by evangelistic
ministriesthe $27 million Creation Museum by the Answers in Genesis ministry and the $16
million Holy Land Experience by behemoth Trinity Broadcasting. Bible Park will espouse no
denomination. "Operationally," Bar-Tur says of his project's for-profit status, "it's where the
incentives lie. The park in Orlando is a ministry pushing their message, [thus] limiting their
audience and repeat visitors." Courting private investment instead of ministry money, the Bible Park
might manage to sidestep some polarizing positions that hindered destinations like the once-failing
Holy Land Experience, which, before Trinity, was funded by Zion's Hope, whose explicit goal was to
convert Jews to Christianity; as well as the Creation Museumroundly criticized by scientists
for promoting that early Homo sapiens mingled with dinosaurs. Bar-Tur implies that for-profit
investors also mean more seed capital. "As a business, we have to provide the best experience
possible, and you would not be able to create this level of experience [with their level of
funding]," he says, explaining Bible Park's two anchor attractions will cost about as much as the
entire Holy Land Experience. Despite the healthy private investment, which Bar-Tur says will
cover a majority of the $150 million to $200 million budget, he expects to pay the remainder with
bonds funded by tax-incremental financing. Though controversial, TIF money seems plausible to local
government, although no one could say so specifically since SafeHarbor hadn't submitted an official
proposal. "They have said it would take a few months, but since April we have seen no definitive
plans," Rutherford County Mayor Ernest Burgess says. "It sounds great, but we have no idea as to
what will be a benefit since nothing is on the table yet. We're left in the dark." State Sen. Jim
Tracy says the new revenue stream would be terrific, not that he'd have much say since recent
legislation made such decisions completely local. "The tourist dollars would be big," he says, "if
it ever comes to pass." Plainly stated, if it ever gets to the planning stage, many will think
Bible Park USA a dump truck of fromagebut many won't. And the kind of tourism and tax revenue
it might generate would be a substantial boon to local business and community coffers. But is the
tradeoff worth the payoff?
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