Evermore Park

Last updated

Evermore Park
Location382 South Evermore Lane, Pleasant Grove, Utah, United States
Coordinates 40°21′32″N111°45′58″W / 40.359°N 111.766°W / 40.359; -111.766
StatusDefunct
Opened
  • September 29, 2018 (2018-09-29) (Evermore Park) [1]
  • Canceled (The Realm Town)
ClosedApril 8, 2024 (2024-04-08) (Evermore Park) [2]
Owner
  • Ken Bretschneider (Evermore Park)
  • Travis Fox & Michelle Fox (The Realm Town)
Theme Medieval / fantasy
Operating seasonYear-round, with various breaks

Evermore Park was a fantasy adventure theme park in Pleasant Grove, Utah that opened on September 29, 2018, under the direction of Ken Bretschneider. [1] The park allowed guests who visited to interact with trained actors who portrayed fantasy characters. [1] [3] The only traditional ride was "The Evermore Express", a small train that travelled around the park. [4] [5] Evermore had been compared by critics to the fictional Westworld, renaissance fairs, and Choose Your Own Adventure books. [6] [7]

Contents

On April 8, 2024, the property's landlord declared the park closed. [2] [8] On August 5, 2024, Travis and Michelle Fox took over the property. [9] On September 20, 2024, the new tenants revealed that the park would be renamed to The Realm Town. [10] [11] In January 2025, it was revealed the sale of the property between Evermore and The Realm Town operator Realm ATV had been cancelled, and lawsuits were filed shortly afterwards between the two parties. [12]

History

Evermore Park

Promotional logo for Evermore Park Tan Evermore-1920w.png
Promotional logo for Evermore Park

Evermore Park was created by Ken Bretschneider, the founder of DigiCert. According to Bretschneider, the idea for Evermore partially arose from his tradition of elaborately decorating his home in Lindon, Utah for Halloween each year. [13] The concept for Evermore Park was debuted at Salt Lake ComicCon in 2014, with the park announced to be opened the next year. [14] Josh Shipley left Walt Disney Imagineering to become CCO of Evermore in 2017. [15] The park had its grand opening on September 29, 2018.

The park experienced financial difficulties, with some buildings and areas of the park remaining unfinished throughout the park's life. [16] [17] By June 2020, several lawsuits had been filed against Evermore by contractors who had not been paid in full for the construction of the park's buildings. [18] One of the attraction ideas Bretschneider and visual effects artist Curtis Hickman had envisioned for the project, which would combine virtual reality with a physical environment, was spun off from Evermore into a separate business known as The Void, which also faced difficulty due to the COVID-19 pandemic. [19] [20] [21]

In 2021, many of the park's actors were laid off, and the land and buildings of the park were sold to Brandon Fugal, the chairman of Colliers International-Utah, a part of Colliers International, reportedly allowing the park to break even. [22] [23] On April 8, 2024, Fugal announced that the park's previous tenants had defaulted and been evicted from the property, and that a "new enterprise" would be making improvements to the park. [8]

The Realm Town

On August 5, 2024, Travis and Michelle Fox took over the property. [9] On September 20, 2024, they revealed that the park will be renamed to "The Realm Town". [10] [11] By September 29, 2024, author Brandon Sanderson bought land next to the park, with the intention to build a bookstore, as part of a project called "Dragonsteel Plaza". [24] [25]

Evermore filed a lawsuit against Realm ATV on January 3, 2025 due to a request from Realm ATV to lower the purchase price for the property. [12] Realm ATV countered with a lawsuit of their own, claiming significant decay in the Evermore property's condition lowered the site's land value, and that they would not continue to pursue building The Realm Town at the Evermore site. Realm ATV also noted that the sale of properties around Evermore Park had reduced the potential crowd capacity of The Realm Town from 2,000 guests to only 185 guests.

Features

Evermore did not have traditional rides. Instead, most of the guest experience revolved around interactions with actors in the park's fantasy setting, where guests were encouraged to roleplay for themselves and take part in the park's storyline. Visitors in the park were referred to as "World Walkers", and were permitted to come in costume. [5] Guests were able to join one of the park's guilds by completing tasks given to them by characters. [26]

The park also offered archery, axe throwing, and a themed train experience. [17] Vander's Keep, a themed building attached to the park, was a restaurant and bar, and later an events venue. [27]

The park was seasonal and only open on weekends. The first seasonal experience was called Lore, a Halloween-themed storyline during the fall. During the day, there was the Magical World of Lore, a family-friendly Halloween experience; at night, the park became the Cursed World of Lore, a haunted attraction. [17] The second seasonal experience was Aurora, a winter world loosely inspired by the works of Charles Dickens. The final seasonal experience was Mythos, lasting from spring into summer. [28] [29]

Taylor Swift litigation

Evermore entangled itself in legal proceedings with American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift. [30] [31] In February 2021, Evermore Park filed a lawsuit against Swift over the name of her 2020 album Evermore , alleging trademark infringement. [32] Later that month, TAS Rights Management countersued the park on behalf of Swift, claiming that the park was playing Swift's songs "Love Story", "You Belong with Me", and "Bad Blood" without proper licensing. [33] In March, both parties agreed to drop their lawsuits. [34] When Evermore Park sued Realm ATV in 2025, Realm ATV's owner Michelle Fox claimed the case was similar to Evermore's prior Taylor Swift lawsuit. [12]

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References

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