This Massive Michigan Haunted Attraction Has Secret Bars, Fire Performers, and Three Nightmare Houses Under One Roof

Michigan
By Catherine Hollis

A former roller rink in Metro Detroit has been transformed into one of Michigan’s most talked-about haunted attractions, drawing huge crowds each Halloween season with movie-quality sets and intensely immersive scares. Inside the 40,000-square-foot space, visitors move through three separate haunted houses packed with detailed effects, live actors, and elaborate themed environments.

What sets the attraction apart is how much more it offers beyond standard jump scares. Hidden bars, live fire performers, aerial artists, and interactive entertainment turn the experience into a full night out rather than a quick haunted house visit.

The combination of scale, production value, and word-of-mouth buzz has helped the attraction build a devoted following that returns year after year.

The Address, the Building, and the Wild Origin Story

© Hush Haunted Attraction

Most haunted houses are set up in tents or temporary spaces, but this one occupies a permanent, massive home at 37550 Cherry Hill Rd, Westland, MI 48185. The building itself has a fascinating backstory that makes the whole experience feel even more surreal.

Before it became one of Michigan’s most talked-about nightmares, this 40,000-square-foot space was Skateland West, a roller rink where generations of Metro Detroit families spent their weekends. Owner and creative director Cody Bailey transformed every inch of that open skating floor into a sprawling, multi-themed horror world.

The scale of the place becomes clear the moment you arrive. The parking lot is large, free, and often packed, with shuttle service running from an overflow lot nearby.

The exterior gives you just enough of a hint at what is inside to make your heart rate tick upward before you even reach the front door. The journey starts well before the first scare.

Three Haunted Houses, One Continuous Nightmare

© Hush Haunted Attraction

What separates this attraction from a typical haunted house is the sheer scope of what you get for a single admission. There are three fully distinct haunted experiences housed under one roof, and in the 2025 season they are connected by one continuous storyline that threads through all of them.

The three houses are Twilight Hotel, Swampland’s Hollow, and Rosecliff Hall: Army of Monsters. Each one carries its own visual identity, its own cast of characters, and its own brand of terror.

Moving between them feels intentional rather than abrupt, with each transition building on the tension of what came before.

The pacing inside is one of the things that stands out most. There are moments of genuine quiet before something erupts in your face, and the balance between atmosphere-building and active scares is handled with real craft.

Over 100 professional actors populate these spaces, and their energy and commitment to the performance is immediately obvious from the first room onward.

The Secret Bars Hidden Inside the Haunted Houses

© Hush Haunted Attraction

Hidden inside the walls of the haunted houses are three secret bars, and finding them is part of the fun. Names like Voodoo Blues, Expedition Base Camp, Von Rose Distillery, Winter Wraiths, The Excavators Den, and Franky’s Freaky Fun Shack have cycled through the seasons, each one themed to match the surrounding horror environment.

To access the bars, guests can purchase a Bar Creep Pass or acquire a special token, which grants entry at each stop along the way. The bar areas themselves are elaborately decorated, with details and artifacts that match the storyline of the haunted house surrounding them.

Drinks are available as individual purchases or as a bundle of three tickets, one per bar. The themed cocktails match the atmosphere of each space, and the bars offer a genuinely clever way to pace yourself through a long evening.

Whether you are there for the scares or the full theatrical experience, the bars add a layer that most haunted attractions simply do not offer.

Hush Falls City and the Queue Line That Is Actually Entertainment

© Hush Haunted Attraction

Waiting in line at most haunted attractions means standing on pavement staring at your phone. At this one, the queue itself is a production.

The outdoor waiting area is designed as an immersive Bourbon Street-style block called Hush Falls City, complete with themed storefronts and roaming costumed characters who interact with the crowd.

The energy in this space is high from the start. Fire dancers, aerial artists swinging from curtains, and live performers keep the crowd entertained during the wait, which can stretch to an hour or more on busy nights.

Rather than feeling like dead time, the queue functions as a genuine warm-up act.

For the 2025 season, an expanded Mardi Gras-themed scare zone called Rue de L’ombre was added to this area, featuring sliders and stilt performers moving through the crowd. The entertainment value of just the queue experience alone is something multiple visitors specifically call out in their reviews as a highlight of the night.

The Actors Who Actually Perform, Not Just Jump Out

© Hush Haunted Attraction

There is a real difference between a haunted house staffed by people in masks who jump at you and one where the actors are genuinely performing. This attraction leans hard into the latter.

The cast of over 100 performers brings a theatrical commitment to every room that elevates the whole experience beyond a simple scare house.

Actors deliver chilling monologues, whisper directly in your ear, improvise based on crowd reactions, and fill each scene with a sense of living, breathing danger. The performances feel less like a haunted house and more like an interactive horror production where you are an unwilling participant in the story.

The timing and energy of the cast is one of the most frequently praised elements across hundreds of reviews. Even guests who found certain sections less frightening than expected consistently singled out the performers as a genuine strength.

The actors here treat the craft seriously, and it shows in every corridor and every room you pass through.

The Set Design That Makes You Forget You Are in a Building

© Hush Haunted Attraction

Every room inside this attraction is built to make you forget that you are standing inside what was once a roller rink in suburban Michigan. The set design reaches a level of detail that most haunted attractions do not come close to matching, with textures, lighting, fog, and soundscapes all working together to create something genuinely immersive.

High-tech animatronics are integrated throughout the experience, and they hit at the right moments rather than being scattered randomly for cheap effect. The movie-quality construction of each scene is one of the things that has earned this attraction recognition from outlets like USA’s Greatest Haunts and coverage from NBC, Metro Times, and the Detroit News.

The attention to detail extends even to the bars and transition spaces, where the visual storytelling continues without interruption. Nothing about the design feels thrown together or budget-limited.

The creative direction behind each room reflects a team that takes the art of the haunted house seriously, and the results speak for themselves around every turn.

The Midway, the Music, and the Full Night Out Experience

© Hush Haunted Attraction

Beyond the haunted houses themselves, the indoor midway adds another dimension to the overall experience. Live music, themed entertainment, and a horror boutique where guests can pick up merchandise are all part of what makes a night here feel like more than just a haunted walkthrough.

The energy of the midway is genuinely festive, which provides a welcome contrast to the tension of the haunted houses. It functions as a gathering space where groups can regroup, share their reactions, and take in the atmosphere before or after heading through the attraction.

A photo opportunity at the end of the experience lets groups capture a souvenir from the night, and a food stand outside the building rounds out the evening with warm donuts, cider, and other snacks that hit differently after an adrenaline-soaked hour inside. The whole setup is designed to feel like a complete night out rather than a single attraction you move through and leave behind in twenty minutes.

Ticket Options, Passes, and How to Plan Your Visit

© Hush Haunted Attraction

Planning ahead makes a noticeable difference at a venue this popular. Tickets are available for general admission, fast pass, and immediate entry, along with the Bar Creep Pass for those who want access to the hidden bars.

Pricing varies by option, and several visitors have noted that the fast pass is not always necessary, particularly on slower nights early in the season.

The Bar Creep Pass is widely considered worth the extra cost even for guests who are not focused on the bars, simply because the bar areas themselves are beautifully designed and offer a break from the intensity of the haunted houses. Purchasing the bar pass in advance typically offers a slight savings over buying at the door.

The attraction operates during the Halloween season, generally from late September through early November, with Saturday hours running from 7 PM to 10 PM. Checking the official website at hushhauntedattractions.com before your visit is the best way to confirm current hours, pricing, and any special event nights for the season.

Parking, Crowds, and What to Expect on Busy Nights

© Hush Haunted Attraction

On peak nights, particularly Saturdays in October, the crowds at this attraction can be genuinely intense. Free parking is available on-site, but overflow parking at a nearby community center with shuttle service to the entrance is used when the main lot fills up.

Arriving closer to opening time gives you the best shot at a smoother entry experience.

Wait times inside the line to enter the haunted houses can run from thirty minutes to well over an hour on the busiest nights. The entertainment in the queue area helps pass the time, but managing expectations about the wait is important for a good experience.

Weeknight visits earlier in the season tend to move much faster.

Once inside the building, the flow is generally smooth and the pacing of the attraction keeps things moving. The overall layout and crowd management improve the further into the season you get, as the staff settles into the rhythm of the year.

Planning for a full two to three hour evening is a reasonable approach.

Who Should Visit and Who Should Think Twice

© Hush Haunted Attraction

This attraction is not designed for young children, and the venue itself recommends that guests under 12 avoid the experience. The scares are intense, the darkness is genuine, and the actors are fully committed to creating a frightening environment that does not dial back for smaller or more sensitive guests.

For teenagers and adults who enjoy horror experiences, this is exactly the kind of place that delivers a memorable night. Even self-described non-horror fans have come away impressed, noting that the theatrical quality and entertainment value make it worthwhile even when the scares are not their primary draw.

Guests with sensitivity to strobe lights, fog machines, or tight spaces should be aware that all three are used extensively throughout the attraction. The physical layout involves a significant amount of walking through varied terrain, including narrow corridors and unexpected obstacles.

Comfortable shoes and a willingness to be genuinely startled are the two most important things to bring through the front door.

Why the Reviews Keep Coming and the Reputation Keeps Growing

© Hush Haunted Attraction

More than 2,200 Google reviews with a 4.1 average rating and over 1,500 five-star reviews is not something that happens by accident. The reputation this attraction has built over its years of operation reflects a consistent investment in quality, creativity, and guest experience that sets it apart from the seasonal pop-up competition.

Recognition from USA’s Greatest Haunts and media coverage from NBC, Metro Times, and the Detroit News have brought attention from beyond Metro Detroit, drawing visitors who drive significant distances specifically for this experience. The title of Metro Detroit’s number one haunted attraction is one the team has worked to earn and maintain.

What keeps people coming back year after year is the fact that the attraction genuinely evolves. New storylines, new themed areas, new entertainment in the queue, and rotating bar concepts ensure that a return visit does not feel like an identical replay of the last one.

The creative team behind this place treats each season as a new production, and that ambition is exactly what keeps the reviews rolling in.