Puzzling World#Psychic challenge
{{short description|Optical illusion themed tourist attraction in New Zealand}}
{{Use New Zealand English|date=April 2024}}
{{Infobox company
| name = Puzzling World
| logo = Puzzling_World_logo.png
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| image = Puzzling World, New Zealand.jpg
| location = Wānaka, New Zealand
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| fate =
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| founded = 1973
| founder = Stuart Landsborough
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| website = {{URL|https://www.puzzlingworld.co.nz}}
| footnotes =
}}
Puzzling World is a tourist attraction near Wānaka, New Zealand. It began as a single storey maze in 1973, gradually expanding to become an award-winning complex of optical illusions and puzzling rooms and the world's first 3-D maze. Puzzling World is well known for its Leaning Tower of Wanaka and eccentric lavatory styled as a Roman bathroom. {{As of|2020}} Puzzling World had received in excess of 4 million visitors and was attracting around 200,000 people a year.
History
Puzzling World, originally a single level wooden maze at Wānaka in the Queenstown area of New Zealand, opened in 1973.{{cite web|title=Stuart Landsborough's Puzzling World New Zealand's epic shrine to all things puzzling|url=http://www.atlasobscura.com/places/stuart-landsborough-s-puzzling-world|website=Atlas Obscura|accessdate=11 September 2017}} It was the brainchild of Stuart and Jan Landsborough who had been forced to sell their house to raise money for the venture after being refused a bank loan. In the first year the park received 17,600 visitors. A puzzle centre was added in 1979 and a second level added to the maze 3 years later. The park continued to develop with the signature Leaning Tower of Wanaka being added in 1999 with a backwards running clock face. Landsborough credits his father with instilling in him an imaginative business sense and believes that part of the reason for the park's earlier success is because he advertised to attract adults rather than children.{{cite web|last1=Saunders|first1=Richard|authorlink=Richard Saunders (skeptic)|title=Puzzling World #425|url=https://skepticzone.libsyn.com/the-skeptic-zone-425-11december2016|website=The Skeptic Zone|accessdate=7 October 2017}}
In 2010 the park began a $2.5 million extension that included sculptures designed by local artists, such as Wētā Workshop, props and effects designers for the Lord of the Rings trilogy.{{cite web|last1=Haggart|first1=Matthew|title=Illusion garden part of $2.5m extension|url=https://www.odt.co.nz/regions/queenstown-lakes/illusion-garden-part-25m-extension|website=Otago Daily Times |date=21 October 2010 |accessdate=11 September 2017}}
Since 2004 Puzzling World has been run by Stuart's daughter, Heidi, and her husband, operations manager Duncan Spear.{{cite web|title=Puzzling World wins Wanaka's inaugural business awards|url=http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/86168684/puzzing-world-wins-wanakas-inaugural-business-awards|website=Stuff (business)|publisher=Fairfax Media|accessdate=11 September 2017}} As of 2020 the site receives in the region of 200,000 visitors per annum.
In 2016 Puzzling World was the overall winner of the Ignite Wanaka Business Awards and was described as "high-performing, unique and sustainable...with very low staff turnover." The SculptIllusion Gallery was recipient of a national award in the New Zealand Commercial Building Awards 2014.{{cite web|last1=Bryant|first1=Grant|title=Wanaka building wins national titles|url=http://www.stuff.co.nz/southland-times/news/10057818/Wanaka-building-wins-national-titles|website=Southland Times (via Stuff)|accessdate=11 September 2017}}
During the Wanaka earthquake of 2015 people had to be evacuated while some visitors reported they thought it was part of the experience.{{cite web|title=Tourists at Wanaka's Puzzling World thought 5.8m quake was part of experience|url=https://www.tvnz.co.nz/one-news/new-zealand/tourists-at-wanaka-s-puzzling-world-thought-5-8m-quake-was-part-of-experience-6307018|website=TVNZ: One News|accessdate=16 September 2017}}
Puzzling World is the official sponsor of Junior Challenge Wanaka, a junior triathlon and part of New Zealand's largest triathlon festival.{{cite web|title=Junior Challenge Wanaka|url=http://www.challenge-wanaka.com/events/junior-challenge-wanaka/|website=Challenge Wanaka|accessdate=18 September 2017}}
File:Water fountain in Sculptillusion Gallery in Stuart Landsborough's Puzzling World.jpg
Attractions
=The SculptIllusion Gallery=
The Sculptillusion gallery is a large illusion room which opened in December 2012. It contains impossible objects, perspective paintings and reversible figures. The sculptures include a tap seemingly suspended in mid air and a floating bench, as well as architectural features such as a stone carpet and living wall, created by New Zealand sculptors and designers. The building also contains several Jerry Andrus illusions including Crazy Nuts (an impossible nuts and bolts interactive illusion) and The Magic Square logic puzzle. There is also an area devoted to exhibitions, the first dedicated to advertisements and familiar products which plays with how the viewer sees recognisable company logos.{{cite web|title=New ways to puzzle the punters|url=https://www.odt.co.nz/regions/queenstown-lakes/new-ways-puzzle-punters|website=Otago Daily News|date=12 December 2012 |accessdate=18 September 2017}}{{cite web|last1=Gerbic|first1=Susan|authorlink=Susan Gerbic|title=Puzzling World - NZ|url=https://www.csicop.org/specialarticles/show/puzzling_world_-_nz|website=Skeptical Inquirer|date=25 August 2017 |publisher=CSI|accessdate=7 October 2017}} and more recently, "Un-useless" - A large display of impossible or useless inventions and creations by local sculptors and international artists aimed to amuse, confuse and amaze.{{Citation needed|date=December 2024}} Other features include stained glass windows with geometrical patterns and an area for conferences and events.
=The Leaning Tower of Wanaka=
The Leaning Tower of Wanaka is, as the name implies, a tower that is seemingly impossibly balanced on one corner, making the whole structure lean at an angle of 53 degrees to the ground.[http://www.puzzlingworld.co.nz/attractions.html 'Leaning and tumbling towers'] on Puzzling World website, viewed 2011-07-30
=Optical illusion rooms=
File:Puzzling World wall of faces.jpg
The Illusion Rooms include a set of rooms designed to absorb the visitor within its particular optical illusory theme. Aside from "The Sculpillusion Gallery" it contains The "Hologram Hall", a large range of holographic images, both traditional and new. The "Tilted House", built at a 15-degree angle, contains illusions such as water apparently flowing uphill, the octagonal "Hall of Following Faces" with back-lit hollow mask illusions on the walls, created by artist and sculptor Derek Ball,{{cite web|last1=Berwick|first1=Louise|title=Artist aims to create the perception of movement|url=http://www.stuff.co.nz/nelson-mail/news/7291944/Artist-aims-to-create-illusions|website=Nelson Mail (via Stuff)|accessdate=16 September 2017}} and an Ames Room, a perspectively confusing room with a delayed video feed where visitors can see themselves afterwards with seemingly different heights depending on where they were positioned.{{cite web|title=STUART LANDSBOROUGH'S PUZZLING WORLD, WANAKA|url=http://www.exploring.co.nz/puzzling-world-wanaka.html|website=Exploring New Zealand|accessdate=10 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171025175649/http://www.exploring.co.nz/puzzling-world-wanaka.html|archive-date=25 October 2017|url-status=dead}}
=3D maze=
Puzzling World features a large maze in which the traveller must reach four coloured corner towers before finding the middle courtyard (emergency doors are included for those who struggle).
Psychic challenge
The operators of Puzzling World have for many years offered a monetary prize for anybody who can prove they have psychic powers; potential winners need to use their powers to locate a specific item located somewhere on the Puzzling World site. When the challenge began the prize was originally $50,000 NZD, for which any participant was required to find two halves of a promissory note which had been hidden within {{convert|5|km}} of the building. This was then reduced to a radius of {{convert|200|m}}, and finally in 2006, when the prize was doubled to $100,000 NZD, {{convert|100|m}}. Any 'psychic' participant is required to pay $1000 to take part (apparently to ensure no time wasters). For this they may sit in a room for 30 minutes with Stuart Landsborough seated behind a screen and ask questions while he visualises responses. The participant then has an hour to find the notes. To date the prize has not been claimed, although seven "professional" psychics have attempted the challenge, including a diviner and a man who prayed to locate them but failed to come back with an answer.{{cite web|last=Gerbic|first=Susan|url=https://www.csicop.org/specialarticles/show/puzzling_world_-_nz|title=Puzzling World - NZ|date=August 25, 2017|publisher=Committee for Skeptical Inquiry|accessdate=2018-01-05|authorlink=Susan Gerbic}} In July 2022, the challenge officially ended.{{Cite web |title=The Challenge |url=https://www.psychicchallengenz.com/the-challenge |access-date=2023-08-16 |website=Psychic Challenge NZ |language=en}}
See also
References
{{reflist|30em}}
External links
{{Commons category|Puzzling World}}
- [https://www.psychicchallengenz.com/ The Psychic Challenge]
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Category:Buildings and structures in Otago
Category:Prizes for proof of paranormal phenomena
Category:Towers in New Zealand