Shanghai Disneyland is giving us a glimpse of how theme parks will operate during the coronavirus crisis. As the first major theme park to re-open, the Disney park has put new protocols in place to keep guests and castmembers safe. The park, which was closed for more than three months, reopened Monday with temperature checks and masks are required for everyone. There is also another thing visitors must show to gain entry to the park, Business Insider writes:

Visitors are required to make advance reservations, show government-issued identification and download a smartphone app issued by the Shanghai city government that tracks their health and their contacts with anyone who might have been exposed to the virus.

That allows the company to “understand and regulate the flow of traffic,” said Andrew Bolstein, the park’s senior vice president for operations.

The park is also capping attendance at 20% capacity, that’s below the 30% recommended by the Chinese government. Waits for rides were said to be under 5 minutes and visitors found themselves spaced out on rides and at shows. The AP writes:

Decals on sidewalks and at lines for attractions show visitors where to stand to leave space between themselves. The company said rides will be limited to one group of visitors per car to keep strangers apart.

“We don’t want people too close — front, back or side,” said Andrew Bolstein, the park’s senior vice president for operations.

There is no word when U.S. theme parks will reopen, for now, workers at Disneyland and Disney World are furloughed indefinitely.

Watch more above from CNN.