Our
company (Halloween Productions, Inc.) has done a lot of work in the
Niagara Falls area. A few years ago, a guy named Ron Doherty showed up
at my haunted house from Buffalo saying he wants to open a haunt
someday. Ron was very hopeful of learning more about our haunted house
and the industry. We gave him the tour even though we had never met him
or heard of him before. Over the next year, we received some phone calls
from Ron in Buffalo who told us that he was making tombstones and props.
We developed a friendship over the next couple of years and even had Ron
and his partner, Jason (Jay) Anderson, help us install Spiderman and
Hulk in Niagara Falls.
After several years of visiting haunts and going to the TransWorld Show,
Ron and Jay finally made the plunge. Despite the fact that I personally
visit the Buffalo/Niagara area several times a year, I never had a
chance to visit their haunted house, FRIGHTWORLD. Ron and Jay invited me
time and time again to stop in and take a look. The last time I was in
Buffalo we planned on getting together and hang out. I overslept and
kinda blew the opportunity, but Ron graciously kept calling me.
Exhausted, I remember looking at the phone and thinking to myself,
“Don’t answer; go back to bed,” but I picked up the phone instead, and
I’m very glad I did because Ron picked me up and took me over to his
haunt. Ron and Jay gave me the grand tour, and I was blown away to say
the least.
To be honest, I was thinking, “There’s no
way these two guys, who have only been in the business a couple years,
build a haunt this detailed.” But I remembered how Ron and Jay had
visited over 100 haunted houses, been to TransWorld several times,
attended seminars, bought videos and more. These guys did their
homework, and they built a great haunted house, all based on the
industry knowledge they had accumulated. Ron and Jay took their time,
learned as much as they could, and when they finally built a haunt they
blew the doors off! I had actually talked to Ron many times prior about
doing an article to discuss his many haunted travels. Finally, we have
that, PLUS they can now talk of their own amazing haunted house in
Buffalo, New York.
Q1: Ron and Jay, please introduce yourselves
to us starting with some background information on you guys.
A: Well first off, on behalf of myself and
partner Jay, let us thank Hauntworld for the opportunity to tell its
readers how we started and where FRIGHTWORLD is going. I hope we can
teach some of our success to everybody reading this article.
My name is Ron Doherty; I’ve been intrigued
with Halloween and Haunts as long as I can remember. I started when I
was a kid. My parents still remind me of the time I brought bags of
leaves and branches downstairs into their newly remolded basement for a
haunted maze for family and friends. I was only 8. From those days until
now, I have always been associated with some sort of Halloween event. My
partner, Jay Anderson, and I established our friendship in high school
and later into college. We’ve known each other for over 15 years.
This business was a huge endeavor, and I
couldn’t have done it without Jay, so I quickly approached him with an
idea for going into business together. That was over 6 years ago.
Professionally, it was my best decision. With my business and creative
study degrees and Jay’s carpentry, design talents, and will to learn, we
complimented each other extremely well and made a great partnership. Jay
builds and I detail/paint every set and prop we’ve ever created.
We were home haunters for three years
collectively up until 1999. Our haunt started off as an
attraction to Jay’s annual Halloween costume party. We than started our
first company in late 2000, Graveyard Tombstones (graveyardtombstones.com),
making high end tombstones to the haunt industry. Our next business
endeavor was Eerie Productions, (eerieproductions.com) producing
detailed props and sets, and later designing haunts and offering
consulting. Our first professional haunt was at the Erie County Fair in
the summer of 2002, followed by the debut of FRIGHTWORLD in October
2002, and we’ve been running both ever since.
Q2: When did you two decide you wanted to
build a haunted house and why?
A: Well, back when we were home haunting, we
eventually opened to the public. One of our local news stations set up
camp at our event showcasing it with interviews and live news for each
of their newscasts that day. They alone helped propel us to entertain
over 3500 patrons during a four day span. At this point, we knew we had
something special. Unfortunately, the amount of people at a residential
setting is just not safe. We felt it was in the best interest of
everybody that we would then pursue other options for the future
seasons. We had a love for Halloween and a determination to go pro and
nothing was going to get in our way.
Q3: What were the first steps you took to get into the haunted house
industry?
A: First thing we did is research, and then
more research, and then, yep you got it, even more
research. We sent over 2500 emails to individual haunt owners
introducing who we are and what our intentions were. We asked questions
like “How do you start?” “How do you raise capital?” and “Can it be
profitable?” We actually only received a handful of responses from haunt
owners. We also bought books and read everything on the net. From day
one, we treated this as any other business. We planned and wrote a
business plan. We were fully dedicated and always willing to do what it
took to make this plan succeed.
Q4: I understand you both toured many
haunted houses for a couple years before taking the plunge. What haunts
did you visit, and what did you learn? Additionally how did touring
haunts help you when you finally decided to build your own attractions?
A: Well we visited more haunts than we can
list, actually over 100 haunts during the 2000 through 2001 seasons. We
went all over the country, Florida, Canada, Pennsylvania, Kansas,
Missouri, and Ohio to name a few. Some of the haunts that stood out were
The Darkness (St. Louis), The Beast and Edge of Hell (Kansas City),
Terror in Tallmadge (Ohio) and The School House (Ohio).
All of these haunts had something in common.
They were highly detailed, and the owners knew how to organize and
market their events. These events had the least gore and had the most
patrons in line. Their target markets were expanded from the norms,
meaning they targeted a wide range of audiences. We really learned what
worked and what didn’t. For instance, timing is everything to an actor,
lighting and sound makes the show, and signage is crucial for your
customers.
We also learned not to invade a patron’s
personal space, no extension cords hanging
everywhere, no slides, no crawl spaces, no uneven floors, and definitely
support your walls well. We talked to the other haunts’ customers and
listened to their opinions and reactions after the shows. Those were
some of the comments we heard.
As haunt owners, we have always looked at
our event from the customers’ point of view and that’s exactly what we
did during this time. Visiting these attractions was one of the best
learning experiences. We found that a quality attraction was hard to
find.
Q5: Did you meet haunters who would help you along your way? How did
this impact your education into the haunted house industry?
A: We meet some remarkable haunters along
the way, and made some great friendships at the same time. We wouldn’t
be where we are today without their support and help. One of the few
haunters during our touring that actually spent the time to talk to us
was Rodney Geffert, owner of the 7 Floors of Hell. Rod and his lovely
wife, Melinda, have been awesome. Rod was there from day one, and we’ve
been great friends since. His willingness to share his knowledge of the
business to us is something we will never forget.
Another haunter that has been there from the
beginning is you, Larry. You have seen us from the early home haunt
days, during the Graveyard Tombstone days, and the past four FrightWorld
seasons. Larry and Jim have always been gracious to show us around their
attractions. Larry has always been there to talk to us when we have a
question and never afraid to give us an answer. We personally thank you
for everything.
We
met Mike and Carrie Geoff of Lima, Ohio at the 2001 TransWorld Show.
They offered to take us in for a night and learn what it was like to
actually run a pro haunt. This experience was really hands on and
prepared us for what was to come. We thank them for a great time and
wish them the best.
There have been many people including our
families and friends that have helped us a long the way. We contribute
all of their help to our success. We have found networking to be one of
thebest tools to bettering your attraction.
Q6: As I understand, you purchased a lot of
videos, books and went to seminars. Would you suggest these types of
resources to others who aspire to be haunters? Does it really help you
and if so, how?
A: Absolutely, grab everything you can find.
The information has been priceless. Learn from others’ mistakes, so you
yourself will save tons in the long run. I can’t imagine another company
being as prepared as we were to enter the industry. We had every
magazine, every book, and every video ever made. We had binders of
internet how-to’s, and spent days at the library. Eventually, we reached
a leveling-off point and felt we graduated and were ready.
Q7: So after learning about everything you could from others in the
industry, when you finally decided it was time for you to build your
haunt what were the exact steps that you followed to launch your haunted
house?
A:
Well, after the 2002 TransWorld Show we decided this was it and moved
forward with our plan. We decided to run a highly detailed, multi-themed
event. Since this was a huge step, we decided a good test run would be
at our local fair. The Erie County Fair is the 2 nd largest county fair
in the United States with an annual attendance of over one million plus;
it runs in late August.
We contacted the fair and presented them
with a 5000 sq. ft. two haunted house show. At this time, we had nothing
and felt this would be a great learning experience. We really thought
this would be a great transition since there would be little marketing.
After all, a million plus were already attending. The fair loved the
idea, so we went forward building. During this time, we also needed to
secure a location for October.
We quickly found doing a haunt indoors was
going to be practically impossible with our budget, so an outdoor show
under tents was our solution for October. Well, in Buffalo, that wasn’t
the smartest idea, but we’ll get into that later.
We debuted at the Fair, and it was a hit.
The buzz of our arrival was in the air. Another plus to the Fair was the
opportunity to market our October venue. October quickly approached. Our
idea of three attractions at 8000 sq. ft. under tents seemed to work out
quite well. Our good friend Rodney had been running under tents for
years and been successful, so we felt this was the greatest solution for
us.
Our marketing plan was in place. Our
sponsors were on board. We had a great location. Employees were hired,
and the show was amazing, especially considering it was under tents. We
were advertising on four radio stations, running full colored ads,
promoting a celebrity appearance, and circulating over a quarter million
coupons . These steps should have propelled us to achieving our goal.
Q8: As we all know it’s very difficult to
finance your first haunted house. Please tell us how hard
this was and what methods you used to get your haunt off the ground?
A: Let’s see…We were fortunate enough to
raise capital with our two companies. Most of our advertising budget was
paid after the season. Most of our labor for set-up was donated from our
family and friends. We are a production company, so we built all of our
own sets…This is one of our competitive advantages. And finally, we read
all the right literature on running a profitable show. Our Fair
experience really solidified the rest of our capital needs.
Q9: So you saw tons of haunts, bought the videos, went to the seminars,
started producing props, and now you’re running your own haunted house.
What were the major things you learned from actually doing it the first
year?
A: We did our part researching and preparing
for our opening. We read all the directions. Then, it came time to put
it together and turn it on. One major learning experience would be this:
The business is unpredictable and full for surprises. We learned the
importance of customer service, which is a mainstay at FrightWorld. We
also learned how to teach, manage and organize employees. We always
looked at our venue from the customer point of view. Exit polling and
surveys became tremendously important when making year-to-year
decisions. Listening to your customers and employees should be a daily
routine. We learned that our event is never done…What I mean is this: We
always continue to work it until the day we take it down. We’re
constantly changing scares, adding props and making the overall
experience better than the day prior.
Q10: What was the overall success level of
your first season?
A: Well, let me just say this… U sing tents
in Buffalo… What were we thinking?... Snow!! I can’t say it was that
bad, and Buffalo is a great place to live and operate. However, Buffalo
is known as the snow capital of the country, but honestly it isn’t. We
had an unusual season that year with weather. From heavy rain on the
weekends to wind-storms and an extremely early snowfall our last week of
the season, it was bad weather. When we were shoveling five inches of
snow off our tents, we quickly realized our decision for an outdoor
venue was extremely risky.
We budgeted and planned for a realistic
10,000 patrons, we came short of that goal by 4,000
.
We were fully aware that was a high number for a first year, but felt
confident with our plans, research and motivation. We felt it was
attainable.
We analyzed the season (both during and
after) to figure out why our numbers were so down. Our thoughts were
weather, other haunts opening that year, and the appearance of a tent
show all contributed to our dissatisfaction with the year. We lost a ton
of money that year, around $50,000, and we were looking for answers.
Q11: Going into year number two and three, what did you modify or change
to put your haunted house over the top?
A: We started working the day after
take-down for the 2003 season…planning, budgeting, and already
designing. We felt that an indoor event was essential, along with an
expansion that would over double our size. We settled at a mall, which
had a 45,000 sq. ft. vacancy. It was a beautiful building with tile and
rug, elevators, escalators and multiple offices. We had the support from
the mall and doubled our advertising budget. We also tripled our actors
and built two new shows.
By learning from our exit interviews, we
knew what the customer wanted and gave it to them. We changed the
existing show completely, and gave Buffalo a truly unique
experience…five stand-alone haunted houses at a very, fair fifteen
dollar price tag. Our website was overhauled, our hearse was revinyled,
and we acquired more sponsors and ran more promotions than the year
before. All of these changes almost tripled our attendance and made us a
mainstay in Buffalo. That year, we had two full-page, full-color stories
in the local paper and a multitude of news appearances.
Our
2004 season, saw just as many changes. We sold and set up one of our
past attractions in China. We replaced that attraction with a new one.
We added additional vendors, revamped our existing attractions, and
brought the show size up to around 20,000 sq. ft. We saw a 25% growth
that season topping us at over 21,000 customers. However, some nights
became a bit chaotic. We came close to closing the show, because as a
haunt owner you have a responsibility for thesafety of your customers
and staff. We knew then that we needed a change.
Our past season had the same success with
growth. We out grew our mall location and moved to a 60,000 sq. ft.
building right next door, with 50 ft. ceilings and an abundance of space
that we had no problem filling. Our show size now is close to 25,000 sq.
ft., and with a newly opened Dave and Buster’s in our old location, it
is truly the number one entertainment destination for Buffalo.
Our success was mainly a combination of
listening to our customers, giving our repeat customers a reason to come
back year-after-year, and truly giving them a fair price for five
individual stand-alone houses (not one house broken up multiple times).
Q12: You have a multi-themed event with several attractions. Please tell
us more about the set up of your haunted houses.
A: All sets are made prior to set-up. We
have over 2,000 wall panels, 700 sheets of detailed luan walls, and
trailers upon trailers of props. We build a small city in three weeks
time. We build our show like a permanent attraction but with a temporary
time frame.
Every year the floor plan is completely
different from the last year, which keeps it fresh and exciting. When it
is complete, there is over a mile of walking to experience FrightWorld.
We choose to theme each attraction in order
to give our customers a unique and different experience. Each attraction
has a different entrance and exit with a façade designed around the
theme of that show. When customers enter our event, they’re amazed at
the presence of five shows indoors. There’s two to the right, two to the
left and one straight ahead against the back wall. There’s a large
concession area and two 20 ft. projector screens playing custom videos.
Actors are trained and managers are in place for each show. Queue-line
entertainers are a must
in the large, open center area. Efficiency and organization is a key for
a successful multi-themed event. We really give our customers the
ultimate Halloween experience!
Q13: What do you think the advantages and
disadvantages of a multi-themed event are?
A: Some of the advantages are that they have
five options, giving the customer a choice. They can choose when and
which attraction to go to. This enables them to wait in five lines
instead of one; this splits their wait time and builds anticipation for
each show. At the same time they may not realize they waited over 2 or 3
hours in line total. They also encounter five ticket takers that
reinforce the rules and greet them to FrightWorld and that specific
attraction. It also gives an opportunity to purchase merchandise and
relax at the concessions, which means a greater opportunity for
additional revenue. Picture opps are huge, and the media loves the
camera friendly atmosphere.
The disadvantages are limited, but they do
exist. Some customers may not like a particular theme or have come
accustomed to a traditional haunted house. Multi-theming is a tremendous
amount of work each with very complicated design.
Q14: You had a pitch black maze, which seems
to be envogue right now but you had some interesting twists inside your
black maze. Tell us about them!
A:
Everybody‘s been through a black maze, the philological fear of darkness
is more than we could ever create. So again, to impress and to give our
customers a unique experience, we took our 3000 square foot dark maze
and added a raised platform for our actors. This platform set off the
ground two feet and went the entire length of the show. There wasn’t a
turn in the show that any actors couldn’t get you from above. The walls
went up around this platform at six feet, to fool our guests, when
running their fingers against the wall, that there was nobody there. We
carpeted the platform so there would be little if any noise and ran a
dimly lit rope light guiding our actors where to go. This with the
additions of strobe lights to reset vision, Bose speakers, and a few
sets with timed lights made this attraction an awesome experience.
Q15: Your graveyard was incredible. Tell us a little bit about your
background creating graveyards.
A: Our graveyard sets have just as much
detail as our entire show. This is our dedication to the customer and
our plan of excellence. A graveyard starts with its tombstones; we have
some great experience in our background with Graveyard Tombstones. We
started that company because there was a void for very realistic,
detailed, durable tombstones. We needed that realism for our show, and
found a niche in the industry at the same time. We studied movies,
visited cemeteries, and collected books/pictures of cemetery sets all
before creating.
In our graveyard, there are two 400 gallon
swamps on each side of a bridge. These are nothing more than pond liners
configured in irregular patterns, with four by four constructions. With
about two inches of water, proper lighting, a soundtrack and some
cattails, we successfully made a believable swamp. We also added bushes,
trees, branches, dirt, and stones. We added two 3000 watt strobes to the
lightning system, bass kickers under the bridge, and two double 18-inch
subwoofers to add believability of being outdoors. We added scents and
have scenic lights strategically placed to showcase our sets. By adding
a low lying fogger and actors in ghille suits, we fulfilled the illusion
of being outdoors in a scary, swampy graveyard.
Q16: Two of your haunted houses shared the same graveyard. How did that
work to your benefit and tell us more about how you brought in an entire
dump truck load of dirt to create a very realistic graveyard.
A: One of our attractions is called House of the Dead , a themed haunted
mansion, and the other is Castle of Fear, a dark castle with an outdoor
cemetery. They do indeed share the view of the cemetery.
We like to design our attractions
interactive and put considerable thought in them. The cemetery is a very
large and impressive set, and we wanted viewed at multiple
locations/angles. This enables a sense of what is to come. It’s
efficient, and it adds value to the customer. The House design sends
patrons outdoors on a decrepit porch that over looks the cemetery in the
backyard. There are also windows inside the house with a view to the
cemetery. In the Castle, you view thecemetery three times before
meandering through the actual cemetery set.
The cemetery itself is around 3000 square
feet. To fill this area, it took four entire dump trucks of
dirt. We did this for the commitment to realism, and it enabled us to
have more flexibility in creating rolling hills, grave ditches and
coffins rising out from beneath.
Q17: What are some tips you can offer
haunters out there for creating the ultimate graveyard?
A: A cemetery is a very easy, affordable,
addition to your haunted event. It brings the outdoors in. However, when
you bring anything organic inside, I encourage you to check with your
inspectors. They approve them if they are treated with a flame
retardant. We recommend spraying up to three times to be safe. Remember,
they will do a flame test, and ultimately you are responsible for the
safety of your customers.
Now that you have branches, the task is
making them free-standing. To do this, simply use cider blocks or weld a
plate with a one-foot length of pipe to the middle. Slide your branches
in, and now you have a free standing tree.
Make sure you cover your black walls with
branches. This fills the void and adds character to your set. We use
some branches and have other walls with custom painted cemetery
backdrops for that extra impression.
Add smells if possible and the best sound
you can afford. Sound is very crucial to a professional haunt, as well
as lighting. You also need props. For example: crows, spider webs,
skeletons, coffins, and possibly a hearse. Detail with an abundance of
Spanish moss, camo-net and spider webs. We have a ‘67 Cadillac hearse as
a prop, and it adds to that realism. When all these elements are
assembled, you too will have a great addition, and very morbid set.
Q18:
You used a lot of bed mattresses in your haunted house and carpet on
certain walls. Why?
A: We use a lot of flame retardant
automotive carpet. This deadens the sound and helps protect our
customers from splinters in all the dark areas. This also cushions, the
walls to protect them fully. We also have a safety mattress at the end
of our chainsaw set. It is secured to the wall and covered to protect
the patrons that flee too fast. These simple measures help protect and
enhance the safety of everyone.
Q19: You have five haunted houses that make
up FrightWorld. Tell us how different each attraction should be to have
a successful multi-themed event.
A: Each attraction should be just that…an attraction. Each of ours is
around 5000 square feet. Each has their own logo and storyline. When
advertising, this helps you get a competitive advantage, and your
perceived value is higher than your ticket price. If you don’t, your
number of returning customers will diminish.
Each attraction is different. There are
detailed shows around different themes, a 3-D show, a
techno chain-link maze and a pitch black maze. Each has their own
character and unique experience.
Q20: Tell us more about the Buffalo haunt
market. You seem to have an unusual market because there are several
haunts in nearby Niagara Falls open year around. How do you think that
affects haunts opening in Buffalo seasonally?
A: In our experience the Niagara Falls market doesn’t affect our core
attendance. By listening to our customers and examining our exit polls,
around 3% of our customers go to the Falls. The Niagara Falls region has
roughly 9 haunts opened year round. We feel that these are tourist
attractions catering to the tourist crowd.
The Buffalo haunt market is home to some
great haunts. There are two that are worth mentioning Dark Raven Manor (www.darkravenmanor.com)
and Scare at the Fair (www.scareatthefair.com).
Both are innovative and have creative shows that are a great addition to
Buffalo market. We work closely with our competitors and maintain great
relationships.
Q21: So what will you change about your attraction for 2006?
A: 2006 will be exciting! We will surpass
our customer’s expectations again!
Q22: What is the future for FrightWorld?
A: We have just scratched the surface here
in Buffalo, and we look forward to continuing to bring something special
to the area.
Q23: Thanks for your time! Please tell our readers how to learn more
information about your haunted house.

A: Again we appreciate the opportunity, thanks Hauntworld!!!
Please feel free to check the website out
at www.hauntedbuffalo.com or www.eerieproductions.com,
or drop me a line via email hauntedbuffalo@aol.com
Ron Doherty