Fuhua Amusement Park
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Updated April 15, 2024
## Fuhua Amusement Park (富华游乐园), Weifang: what to know before you go
Fuhua Amusement Park (Chinese name: 富华游乐园) is an amusement park in Weifang, Shandong Province, China. The address most consistently published online is 197 Dongfeng East Street (东风东街197号), Kuiwen District, Weifang.
> Data quality flag: The details you provided list the city as Zibo, but the address and multiple travel listings place the park in Weifang (Kuiwen District). I’m treating Weifang as the correct city because it matches the published address in multiple sources.
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## Quick facts (verified)
– Name: Fuhua Amusement Park / 富华游乐园
– Category: Amusement parks
– Address (commonly listed): Shandong Province, Weifang City, Kuiwen District, Dongfeng East Street No. 197
– Recommended visit length: ~2.5–3 hours (Trip.com)
– Seasonal operations: Trip.com shows a winter closure notice and indicates reopening “9:00 AM, February 17” (as displayed on the page at the time captured).
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## Hours and seasonal closures (read this first)
Different platforms publish different hours:
– One listing shows 9:00–17:00.
– Another listing displays winter closure information and a reopening time/date.
What this means in practice: treat posted hours as seasonal and confirm close to your visit—especially if you’re traveling in winter or around Chinese public holidays.
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## Tickets and pricing (what’s reliably published)
Ticketing details also vary by source:
– One source lists 门票20元 (entry ticket 20 RMB) and 通票80元 (pass 80 RMB).
– Another source shows booking “from” pricing and emphasizes the park listing/booking rather than a single fixed ticket.
Data quality flag: I can’t confirm a single “official” tariff from an operator-run page in the sources available here, so treat any price you see online as indicative, not guaranteed.
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## Getting there (practical transit notes)
If you’re arriving via Weifang Railway Station (or the long-distance bus station), one detailed transit write-up suggests:
– Walk to 火车站(向阳路)站 and take Bus 21 to 富华游乐园站, then walk ~250 m.
– It also lists buses 78, 20, 21, 55, 30 (and notes 76 passes the area).
– Taxi guidance is given as “~16 RMB” from the station/bus station area (again, treat as an estimate that can change).
How to use this info smartly: even if bus routes shift over time, “富华游乐园站” is a useful stop name to search inside Chinese map apps and transit apps.
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## What kind of park is it?
Most English-language pages that are accessible here classify it plainly as an amusement park and recommend a half-day-or-less visit window.
You’ll see some listings describe it as a larger “theme park” with many attractions, but those descriptions often include machine-translated counts and odd measurements. Because those specifics aren’t reliably verifiable from an operator source in the material available, I’m not going to repeat them as facts.
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## A realistic visit plan (built only from verified details)
### If you have 2–3 hours
– Aim for the recommended 2.5–3 hour window, which lines up with a “single attraction block” rather than an all-day mega-park.
– Because hours can shift by season, plan your arrival so you still have daylight/time even if the park closes earlier than you expected.
### If you’re visiting during winter
– Expect a possible closure period; Trip.com explicitly shows a winter closure notice and a reopening date/time on the listing snapshot.
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## Accessibility + inclusivity notes (what’s known vs unknown)
– I cannot verify wheelchair access, stroller policies, sensory accommodations, or height restrictions from the sources above.
– If accessibility is important for your group, your most reliable next step is to call ahead using a published inquiry number. One listing provides a ticket inquiry phone: +86-536-8788168.
> Data quality flag: Another travel listing shows a different phone number (0536-8880088). Without an official operator page accessible here, I can’t confirm which is primary, so use caution and cross-check in Chinese maps before calling.
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## Common planning mistakes (and how to avoid them)
– Assuming the city field is correct: your input says “Zibo,” but the address points to Weifang; follow the address, not the city tag, when mapping.
– Trusting one set of hours: at least one major listing explicitly shows winter closure context while another shows a standard daytime schedule. Confirm near your visit.
– Locking in a budget based on a single price snippet: published ticket numbers vary by platform and could reflect different products (entry vs pass vs bundled booking).
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## What I would verify next (and why)
If you want to make this guide even tighter for RealJourneyTravels.com, the next “high-confidence” checks would be:
– An operator-managed page or an official Chinese map listing to confirm current hours, closure dates, and ticket structure
– Whether the park’s address is better represented as No. 197 (Kuiwen District) or the alternative listing line shown elsewhere (Trip.com page displays a different street-number format)
If you paste any official Chinese listing text (or a screenshot), I can lock the details down further without guessing.
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