Urban Air Trampoline Park's closest audience match is Lane Bryant (0.88), a women's apparel retailer — not another entertainment center or family activity venue. No other Entertainment Centers subcategory appears anywhere in the top 10.
The shape is two-peak, with the first cluster anchored by retail and apparel: Lane Bryant at 0.88, Once Upon a Child at 0.87, and Plato's Closet at 0.86 — two of those three being thrift stores. The second cluster is casual dining: LongHorn Steakhouse at 0.86, Hooters at 0.85, and Marco's Pizza at 0.84. Together, these two clusters — value-oriented retail and casual dining — define the structural shape of this audience. Rounding out the top 10 are At Home (home goods, 0.84), Kirkland's (hobbies and gifts, 0.83), Olive Garden (casual dining, 0.82), and Walk-On's Bistreaux & Bar (casual dining, 0.80). The cross-kind pattern here is the finding: an entertainment center whose nearest audience neighbors are almost entirely retailers and restaurant chains, with no fellow entertainment venues in the top 10.
This audience shape points to a consumer who moves across value retail, family-oriented thrift, and casual sit-down dining — a practical, household-focused profile that bridges two distinct commercial worlds.