Rubin Stahl wants Orange County residents stepping into Costa Rica.
His Butterfly Palladium in Buena Park will be as authentic an experience as any outside of the South American country.
“I’m recreating Costa Rica in its entirety,” Stahl said. “It’s going to be something special.”
Stahl joined city leaders to break ground in late May on the $25 million butterfly pavilion that’s expected to open on Beach Boulevard next summer.
Inspired by its globetrotting founder’s infatuation with Costa Rica and the VanDusen Botanical Garden in Vancouver, the city’s latest addition to its revamped entertainment corridor will feature sanctuaries for butterflies, hummingbirds and bees.
It will have a 3D theater for watching documentaries and areas for visitors to walk through gardens alive with butterflies. From viewing areas guests will watch curators and entomologists interact with the insects.
Stahl said his pavilion also will have the largest jellyfish aquarium in the world. “You’re going to walk up to this window and feel infinite.”
Put it all together, and the city’s newest attraction promises to draw some 600,000 visitors per year, officials have previously said.
“The way it’ll light up at night,” Stahl said of the pavilion, “it’ll be the most beautiful thing you’ll ever see. It’ll light up Beach Boulevard.”
A development magnate by way of Montreal, Stahl is behind Canada’s West Edmonton Mall – believed to be the world’s largest shopping center.
He later retired to Scottsdale, Ariz., and in 2013, presided over the construction of Butterfly Wonderland, the country’s largest butterfly conservatory.
“To create something that is so special that it brings people far and wide, millions of people every year, it’s the most amazing thing,” Stahl said.
Three years ago, city officials attended the annual International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions conference in Orlando.
Ruben Lopez, the city’s economic development director, said in the city’s search to replace the old Movieland Wax Museum, they were referred to Stahl and his Butterfly Wonderland exhibit.
Council members visited the Scottsdale location and saw how the attraction drew school field trips and families, Lopez said.
In March 2015, council members unanimously approved selling to Butterfly Palladium the 8.7-acre Beach Boulevard property for $2.5 million. The well-known Movieland sign is expected to stay.
“It’s something different that we don’t have on the entertainment corridor, something you don’t see anywhere in the area,” said Aaron France, assistant to the city manager. “It’ll be educational, so it’ll attract a lot of school groups. Everyone will enjoy it.”