From the website:
# The Walled City: This 14-acre area depicts the lifestyle of the people of Noah’s day.
I've always wondered what the life and times of antediluvian society was like. Now I know where to go!
This walled city includes period shops, restaurants, and venues that bring to life the city and times in which Noah lived, including his house.
Wow, I can't wait to learn what antediluvian cuisine and shopping was like! And what Noah's own house looked like! I'm sure badboy would squeal with delight.
This walk-through of the Ark will enable each guest to gain an understanding of how it could have been built, and how Noah, his family, and all of the representative kinds of land animals were cared for, and then survived on board for 370 days of the Flood and its aftermath.
Only "representative kinds" were allowed on board the Ark, as there would be no room for anything more. No word however on what kind of hyper evolution would be required to yield the current diversity of life on earth from these few "representative kinds".
This area will be similar to a petting zoo, complete with barns, a petting animal area,
Will there be biological waste strewn throughout the area, as there would have been on a real Ark filled with thousands of animals under the care of just 8 caretakers?
# The Tower of Babel: Over 100 feet tall, this structure depicts how the tower may have looked after its completion.
LMAO...A building with its top in the heavens -- at a hundred feet.
Guests enter a highly themed interior and weave along a path that introduces exhibits on the origination of languages and people groups (so-called “races”).
I ain't touching this one.