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New
Arrivals

Geoffrey
Thompson shared a shot with star couple Neil and Christine Hamilton
at Pleasureland. Photo courtesy of Pleasureland Southport.
Its
a tower ride!
Pleasureland
Southport in England announces the arrival of Lucozade Energy
Space Shot, May 8, 2002. Measurements: 150 feet high (45 meters),
12 seats. Delivered by S&S Power.
For its newest thrill ride, the Atlantic Coast park gathered an
eclectic bevy of notable first riders to join managing director
and Blackpool Pleasure Beach impresario Geoffrey Thompson on the
debut ride.
Staff and students from the Liverpool University Air SquadronRoyal
Air Force pilots in trainingwere on hand to compare the 4-g
blast off of Space Shot with supersonic flight. They could
also, if they dared, liken the ride to ejecting from a fighter aircraft.
Steve Bennett has been chasing a lifelong dream of riding a rocket
to the moon, and is currently heading Starchaser Industries, a company
that builds space-reaching rockets. Known throughout Britain as
Rocket Man, his presence was a natural for a ride touted
as a Space Shot. It also provided him an opportunity
to consider some new ideas in launch technology. National celebrities
Neil and Christine Hamilton rounded out the opening day team. He
is a former member of Parliament and nationally known wit. She is
a hostess of entertainment and current affairs programs on British
TV, includingThe Christine Hamilton Show on which she interviews
celebrities who have survived troubled times, making her a perfect
expert to describe a ride expressly intended to provide customers
several seconds of pure fright.
Under a cloudy but dry sky, the debut ride shot off without incident
and was well covered by local and national media, proving an old
amusement industry maxim: even if you cant send your rocket
to the stars, if you bring the stars to your rocket you are sure
to make news.
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Guests
got an unusual perspective while on Wicked Twister, which
inspired a high-five between first official riders ACE President
Bill Linkenheimer and Cedar Point GM Daniel Keller. Photos by
Eric Minton.

Its
an Impulse coaster!
Cedar Point in Sandusky, Ohio, announces the arrival of Wicked
Twister, May 2, 2002. Measurements: 215 feet high (65 meters),
2,700 feet (818 meters) of track, 90-degree angle of track, 450-degree
twist of track, 32 passengers. Delivered by Intamin.
Leave it to Cedar Point to put a twist on a ride that is not even
new to its own market. The park chose the Intamin Linear Induction
Motor-launch Impulse for its 15th roller coaster because Cedar Point
lacked that type of ride in its already varied mix. True to the
parks tradition, it made its version of the Impulse larger
and higher than any others.
However, its the backward twist that sets Wicked Twister
apart. Both uprights of the track twist aroundnot just the
forward towerand the backward twisting perspective gives the
ride a singularity that also is a Cedar Point tradition. Such elements
were enough to give the park substantial buzz on the Thursday media
day, attended by some 350 press representatives and coaster enthusiasts.
The ride's advance appeal was also revealed with a Red Cross-sponsored
auction for the first public rides the following Sunday. Demand
proved so great the park added a second train to the charity auction
and saw about $14,000 raised, with a top bid of $700.
We at Cedar Point have a reputation that when we design and
install a roller coaster it will be different from anything in the
industry or any other park, said Daniel Keller, vice president
and general manager of Cedar Point. Although perhaps people
were reading some of the PR initially and were familiar with the
ride, once they got to Cedar Point and had a chance to ride it they
said, Wow! this is something special.
One of the first-time riders on media day happened to be Dick Kinzel,
Cedar Fairs president and CEO who had been traveling when
Wicked Twister was tested by the rest of the Cedar Point
management team. Its an entirely different sensation,
he said after his experiencing it for the first time. It has
a unique place in the coaster selection here at the park. Im
very pleased with it. Of his first-time, front row ride, he
cited as the most remarkable moment when the train peaked on its
backward climb. When youre going backwards and we actually
stopped you can sort of get your thoughts. Get your thoughts?
Yeah. You know youre up there.
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Its
twin tube slides!
Big Kahunas in Destin, Florida, announces the arrival of Tiki
River Run, May 4, 2002. Measurements: 457 feet long (138 meters),
a drop of 54 feet (16 meters), one and two-person tubes. Delivered
by ProSlide Technology.
The big crowds that gravitated to Big Kahunas first capital
improvement in four years on the seasons opening day were
prompted by the most effective in-your-face marketing the park could
have ever conceived. The park lies right next to U.S. Highway 98,
the beach resort towns main thoroughfare which sees as many
as 80,000 automobiles a day. The new tube slides replaced the Big
Kahuna s original 1987 concrete body slides right at the front
of the park, so local residents driving by knew something new was
happening.
People have been watching the construction since the winter,
and that built excitement, said Jenn Minor, the parks
director of marketing. She also purchased advertising across the
bottom of the local newspapers Sunday front page, a contract
she secured for 13 weeks. Thanks to that combination, Minor said,
a lot of people went immediately to Tiki River Run
on an opening day blessed with 90-degree (32 degrees Celsius) sunny
weather. Guest comments indicated that first-day riders were well
rewarded after the long winters wait, Minor said, especially
one 12-year-old who proclaimed Tiki River Run scarily
exciting.
Sounds like a good promotion slogan for a future attraction at the
park.
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Its
two flat rides!
Dorney Park in Allentown, Pennsylvania, announces the arrival of
Meteor and a Tilt-a-Whirl, May 4, 2002. Meteor
measurements: 48 seats on platforms that circle up to 65 feet (20
meters) above the ground. Meteor delivered by Zamperla, Tilt-a-Whirl
delivered by Sellner Manufacturer.
Though the Zamperla Hawk 48, its counter-rotating arms looping face-to-face
riders in a vertical circle, can be an attention-grabber at any
amusement park, the Dorney staff decided to lay a little low,
this year, said Chris Ozimek, the parks public relations manager.
After the hit installation of the inverted roller coaster Talon
last season, this years capital improvements of two midsize
rides and a couple of new show stages didnt seem to merit
a media day or grand opening hullabaloo.
Events conspired to give the park and its new ride a celebratory
startup, anyway. First there was the Eta Aquarids meteor shower,
a true astronomical event that peaked that Saturday night and proved,
well, heaven-sent for Ozimek. Good timing, huh? he said.
I was really happy to find that when I was digging around
for (Meteor-related references). The connection prompted
one Allentown television newscast to broadcast its weather forecast
live from the park that weekend.
The next day came a more earthy show: more than 1,000 Harley Davidson
motorcycle riders concluding a fundraising parade for the Muscular
Dystrophy Association at the park, the second year in a row the
bikers used Dorney as their destination. We had a lot of media
at the park for that, Ozimek said. The media coverage continued
through this week, with even a Washington, D.C., morning news team
telecasting live from Dorney.
How did the parks Meteor fare in all this activity?
With excellent weather prompting nice crowds, Ozimek
said, Meteor shared top-draw status with Talon and
the venerable Steel Force roller coaster. Not bad for what
was planned to be a low-key opening.
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Its
a water ride!
Adventureland
in Des Moines, Iowa, announces the arrival of Saw Mill Splash,
April 28, 2002. Measurements: 60 feet high (18 meters), 270-foot
slide (82 meters), six person rafts. Delivered by Whitewater West.
Opening day brought a first for this 28-year-old amusement park:
it didnt open.
The
weather forecast for that Saturday called for heavy rains and cold
temperatures all across Iowa. Thats not a good mix,
obviously, said Ryan Sullivan, the parks communications
director. We made the decision before we opened up to not
even open. Sundays weather arrived in a much better
mood, a bit cool and overcast but no rain, and the park saw a decent
turnout, most of which headed directly to the first-in-North America
water ride, which maintained 20-minute-long queues throughout the
day.
Adventureland placed Saw Mill Splash in its Outlaw Gulch
area at the back of the park. Usually its the last place
people go to because it takes a while to get back there, Sullivan
said. It was the busiest area throughout the day. People went
right back there. For the family amusement park, Saw Mill
Splash provides something of a signature ride. Owner Jack Krantz
was looking for a water ridea popular draw for summer-sweltered
Iowansthat could cater to families. He also wanted something
different. This is a perfect fit, Sullivan said, and
with its waterwheel and geysers it is an attractive piece of fun,
too.
The true test came the next Saturday when the park basked under
80-degree sunshine (27 degrees Celsius), a forebear of Iowas
steamy hot summer. The ride was packed the whole time,
Sullivan said.
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St.
Louis Zoo guestsand residentstook in the views along
the Rivers Edge. Photo
courtesy of the St. Louis Zoo.
Its
a multi-habitat exhibit!
The St. Louis Zoo in St. Louis, Missouri, announces the arrival
of Rivers Edge, April 27, 2002. Measurements: 10 acres, four
continents represented, 11 species, three interpretive outposts,
one aquarium, one eatery and one conference center. Delivered by
Dave Mason & Associates (architects), Jones & Jones (conceptual
design).
The zoos marketing team had worked up a perfect script to
celebrate the opening of the third and final phase of its $27 million
crown jewel exhibit which uses a mythical river as its
theme. The zoos new President and CEO Jeffrey Bonner was supposed
to oversee a ceremonial pouring of the waters at the Saturday morning
public opening, but Mother Nature stepped in to do the honors instead.
We had a monsoon that day, said Kevin Mills, the zoos
director of marketing. The whole celebratory festivals, which featured
local performers and artisans representing international cultures,
had to be moved to the various indoor locations.
Despite the deluge, 4,000 people visited the zoo that day, and on
Sunday when the sky cleared and the artists moved their acts outdoors,
23,000 visitors showed up. The numbers rose even higher last week
as word-of-mouth marketing kicked in.
The zoo has given its community a treasure of an exhibit, one where
the barriers between animals and visitors seem nonexistent. This
is an exhibit where you can get closer to the animals than ever
before, Mills said. And through your suspension of belief,
you can achieve a thrill thinking those animals could reach out
and touch you, even if you cant touch them. The zoo
has been marketing Rivers Edge with such slogans as Youre
not at the zoo, youre in it, How close is too
close and Keep repeating: its only a zoo; its
only a zoo.
While the general public is enamored with the seamless Asian elephant
exhibit and the underwater viewing of swimming hippopotamus, the
zoo has created a pioneering conceptual standard for the whole zoo
industry. Rather than put the focus on species or geographic habitats,
Rivers Edge looks at a variety of animals who live along the rivers
in South America, Africa, Asia and North America. The trail encounters
seven cascading waterfalls and moseys past capybaras, bush dogs,
giant anteaters, black rhinoceros, warthog, carmine bee-eaters,
spotted hyenas, cheetahs, and dwarf mongoose, in addition to the
elephants and hippos. Theres a commonality of these
species which live along the worlds rivers, Mills said.
This is an attempt to describe how closely related human beings
are to that wildlife and those wild places, because people congregate
along those waterways.
St. Louis, sitting at the confluence of the Mississippi and Missouri
rivers and innately linked with riverboat lore, is a natural for
such a message. And natural is the keyword to the St. Louis Zoos
latest achievement. No wonder Mother Nature wanted to take part
in the ceremonial pouring of the waters.
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