1 / 19

Chapter 11 Recreation, Theme Parks, and Clubs

Chapter 11 Recreation, Theme Parks, and Clubs. After Reading and Studying This Chapter, You Should Be Able to:. Discuss the relationship of recreation and leisure to wellness Explain the origins and extent of government-sponsored recreation

baba
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 11 Recreation, Theme Parks, and Clubs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 11Recreation, Theme Parks, and Clubs

  2. After Reading and Studying This Chapter, You Should Be Able to: • Discuss the relationship of recreation and leisure to wellness • Explain the origins and extent of government-sponsored recreation • Distinguish between commercial and noncommercial recreation

  3. After Reading and Studying This Chapter, You Should Be Able to: • Name and describe various types of recreational clubs • Identify the major US theme parks • Describe the operations of a country club

  4. Defining Recreation • Refreshment of strength and spirit, a means of diversion • Burnout and stress • Need for increased recreational activities • Leisure • Time free from work

  5. Government-Sponsored Recreation • Founding fathers asked Americans to pursue “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” • Special revenue (taxes) • Boats • Motor fuels • Transient occupancy taxes on hotel accommodations • State lotteries

  6. National Parks in the U.S.A. • National Parks Service founded 1916 • Understanding and preserving the environment • 267 areas and 80 million acres • 272 million visitors each year Grand Canyon Yosemite Yellowstone Grand Tetons Haleakala

  7. National Parks in Canada • 29 large parks and 20+ historical sites • Recreational programming is a concern • Canada tourism Glacier National Park

  8. Commercial Recreation • Recreation • Recreation for a profit • Includes • Theme parks • Attractions • Clubs

  9. Theme Parks • Focus on a dominant theme • Historical or cultural • Geographical

  10. Theme Parks • Disney • www.disney.com • Sea World • www.seaworld.com • Busch Gardens • www.buschgardens.com

  11. Festivals and Themes Areas • Mardi Gras • Grand Ole Opry • Dollywood

  12. Clubs • Private clubs are places where members gather for social, recreational, professional and fraternal reasons • Affluent clientele • Clubs are designed around a housing development where the neighborhood can utilize the services of the club (golf, tennis, pool)

  13. Club Management • Similar to hotel management • Members pay an initiation fee and annual dues • Members feel they have ownership • 6,000 private country clubs in U.S.A. • CMAA • Club Managers Association of America

  14. Hierarchy of Management • Articles of incorporation and bylaws determine structure • Members • Board of Directors • Fiscal responsibility • Policies and strategies • Executive Committee • Activities, grounds, and funding • General Manager • Day-to-day operation

  15. Clubs • Business oriented • Professional clubs • Social clubs • Athletic clubs • Dining clubs • University clubs • Military clubs • Yachting clubs • Fraternal clubs • Proprietary clubs

  16. Voluntary Organizations • Nongovernmental • Nonprofit agencies serving the public at large • Boy Scouts • Girl Scouts • YMCA • YWCA

  17. Armed Forces Recreation • Morale Welfare and Recreation Department (MWR) • Sports • Motion pictures • Crafts and hobbies • Rest centers/recreation centers • Libraries • Food and beverage facilities

  18. Trends • Increase in fitness activities • Increase in personal leisure time • Surge in travel and tourism • Specially targeted programs to at-risk youth • Additional products in the commercial sector • Learning and adventure for the elderly

More Related