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The £346milion theme park that wanted to be the ‘English Disneyland’ in the 1980s… but was never built

Published on April 22, 2025 at 05:10 PM

A THEME park that wanted to be the UK's version of Disneyland was nearly built in the 1980s.

The theme park, called WonderWorld, hoped to open inin Northamptonshire.

Site plan of English Disneyland.
The site of England's Disneyland was due to be in Corby, Northamptonshire
Illustration of a robot with a cutaway revealing an auditorium inside.
The park would have featured a stadium theme on one of the Martian tripods from Jeff Wayne's War of the Worlds
English Disneyland attraction.
In total, the park would have had 13 themed villages

In 1981, planning permission was granted for a the theme park to be built on a 1,000-acre site, around two miles from Corby.

Located at Priors Hall, the park was to be built on a disused quarry which was once linked to the town's former steelworks.

Group Five, who were due to be the developers, claimed that support from the local area including county authorities and the Commission for New Towns.

The attraction was to be modelled on Walt ‘s Epcot which opened in in 1982 and would include 13 themed villages built around a central bowl measuring 700 metres in diameter.

Six of the worlds would open in 1992 and were expected to draw in four million visitors annually.

The attraction would have featured high-tech rides, educational centres, themed , a conservation zone and several shopping areas.

There would have also been an open air concert hall designed to look like one of the Martian tripods from Jeff Wayne's and rides designed by Terry Gilliam.

A brochure produced on the planned park suggested that it would be a “unique resort set in beautifully landscaped surroundings”.

Later in 1985, one of the architects, Derek Walker, said: “The basic ingredients [for WonderWorld] are very simple: entertainment at the very highest level. It's participatory and it's incredibly educational.

“[WonderWorld] will offer the best of British design,” according to the BBC.

In addition, was involved in planning a mock safari and astronomer Sir Patrick Moore was set to contribute an observatory.

There would also have been a 10,000-seat

A family resort with seven hotels initially, an 18-hole course and 100 holiday villas were due to be a part of the destination too.

The overall ambition was to launch a new leisure industry built around “British heritage, folklore, science and innovation”, which was particular supported following the closure of the nearby steelworks in 1980.

Illustration of a theme park building plan.
The park was due to provide new jobs, following the closure of the steelworks in 1980
Illustrations of a futuristic communications station: plans, cutaway, and an exterior view at dusk.
If the park went ahead, it would have opened in 1985

The project was estimated to cost £346million in total and aimed for an initial opening in 1985.

However, due to rising costs, planning delays and difficultly securing long-term funding meant that some of the backers pulled out.

Eventually the plans faded into obscurity and the only parts of the attraction that were built were a large WonderWorld sign and a small wooden cabin.

Today, the site is home to more than 1,000 houses and here are plans to build around 5,000 more in the future.

A before being scrapped – and images were released of what it could have looked like.

However, there is a

Wonderworld logo.
Rising costs and backers pulling out of the project ultimately led to WonderWorld's demise
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