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Coney Island Cyclone

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Coney Island Cyclone
Cyclone Roller Coaster (Coney Island, New York) 001.jpg
Seen from Surf Avenue in 2013
Luna Park, Coney Island
LocationLuna Park, Coney Island
Coordinates40°34′27″N 73°58′40″W / 40.57417°N 73.97778°W / 40.57417; -73.97778Coordinates: 40°34′27″N 73°58′40″W / 40.57417°N 73.97778°W / 40.57417; -73.97778
StatusOperating
Opening dateJune 26, 1927
Cost$175,000
ReplacedGiant Racer
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
DesignatedJune 25, 1991[1]
Reference no.91000907
New York City Landmark
DesignatedJune 12, 1988[2]
Reference no.1636
General statistics
DesignerVernon Keenan
Track layoutCompact Twister
Lift/launch systemChain-lift
Height85 ft (26 m)
Length2,640 ft (800 m)
Speed60 mph (97 km/h)
Inversions0
Duration2:30
Max vertical angle58.1°
Capacity1440 riders per hour
G-force3.75
Height restriction54 in (137 cm)
Pay-Per-Use Sign.png This is a Pay-Per-Use attraction
Coney Island Cyclone at RCDB
Pictures of Coney Island Cyclone at RCDB

The Coney Island Cyclone (also known as the Cyclone) is a wooden roller coaster at Luna Park in Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York City. Designed by Vernon Keenan, it opened to the public on June 26, 1927. The coaster is on a plot of land at the intersection of Surf Avenue and West 10th Street. The Cyclone reaches a maximum speed of 60 miles per hour (97 km/h) and has a total track length of 2,640 feet (800 m), with a maximum height of 85 feet (26 m).

The coaster operated for more than four decades before it began to deteriorate, and by the early 1970s the city planned to scrap the ride. On June 18, 1975, Dewey and Jerome Albert, owners of the adjacent Astroland amusement park, entered into an agreement with New York City to operate the ride. The roller coaster was refurbished in the 1974 off-season, and reopened on July 3, 1975. Astroland Park continued to invest millions of dollars in the upkeep of the Cyclone. After Astroland closed in 2008, Cyclone Coasters president Carol Hill Albert continued to operate it under a lease agreement with the city. In 2011, Luna Park took over operation of the Cyclone.

The coaster was declared a New York City designated landmark on July 12, 1988, and was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on June 26, 1991.

History[]

Early history[]

Wall of the New York Aquarium, with blue-painted fish and the Cyclone
South wall of the New York Aquarium, commemorating the Cyclone's 1927 opening

Coney Island was the largest amusement area in the United States from about 1880 to World War II, attracting several million visitors per year. At its height, it contained three amusement parks (Luna Park, Dreamland, and Steeplechase Park) and many independent amusements.[3]: 147–150 [4]: 11 [2]: 3  The Cyclone site was occupied by the from 1911 to 1926.[5][6]

The success of 1925's Thunderbolt coaster and 1926's Tornado led Irving and Jack Rosenthal to buy land at the intersection of Surf Avenue and West 10th Street for a coaster of their own. With a $100,000 investment, they hired leading coaster designer Vernon Keenan to design a new ride. Harry C. Baker supervised the construction, which was done by area companies including the National Bridge Company (which supplied the steel) and Cross, Austin, & Ireland (which supplied the lumber). Its final cost was reportedly $146,000 to $175,000. When the Cyclone opened on June 26, 1927, a ride cost 25 cents (equivalent to $3.72 in 2020[7]); the present-day ticket price is $10.[8][2]: 5 

In 1935, the Rosenthals took over the management of New Jersey's Palisades Park. The Cyclone was placed under the supervision of Christopher Feucht, a Coney Island entrepreneur who had built a ride called Drop the Dip in 1907 and performed minor retracking work on the coaster.[2]: 6  The ride's first drop was reduced by 5 feet (1.5 m) in 1939,[9]: 2  and it continued to be extremely popular.[2]: 6  A person with dwarfism would originally zap disembarking riders with an electric paddle, a practice which ended during the 1950s.[10]

Decline[]

By the 1960s, attendance at Coney Island had declined.[10] Increased crime, insufficient parking, poor weather, and the post-World War II automotive boom were all cited as contributing factors in the decline.[11] Coney Island's last remaining large theme park, Steeplechase Park, was closed in 1964 and subsequently demolished.[12][13]: 172 [14] The Cyclone was sold to the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation (NYC Parks) in 1965.[10]

A new building housing the New York Aquarium had been constructed west of the Cyclone in 1954.[15] New York City decided that an extension to the New York Aquarium would be a better use of the Cyclone property in 1967, and the city began procedures to claim the property by eminent domain. Its owners, East Coaster Corporation, unsuccessfully fought the city; they did minimal long-term maintenance, enough to keep the ride operating safely.[16] The city bought the Cyclone for $1.2 million in 1969.[14]

The Cyclone was then operated under contract by East Coaster Corporation while the city worked with the New York Aquarium on plans to redevelop the site. There was a lack of long-term maintenance by the city, and the coaster soon received 101 safety violations.[16] In 1972, when plans to expand the aquarium were announced, a "Save the Cyclone" campaign began to oppose the proposed demolition of Coney Island's last wooden roller coaster.[17] This created a conflict between the aquarium (which supported the Cyclone's demolition) and the Coney Island Chamber of Commerce, which opposed it.[18] The owners of the AstroWorld theme park in Houston were considering buying the Coney Island Cyclone and moving it to Houston. This was eventually rejected as being too expensive, however, and AstroWorld's owners instead built a replica, which they branded as the Texas Cyclone.[19][20]

By 1974, city officials doubted their decision to purchase the Cyclone and considered leasing the coaster to a private operator.[21][22] The proposed demolition of the Cyclone was seen as potentially disastrous to Coney Island's economy.[14] The city changed its plans to dismantle the coaster and, in April 1975, invited sealed bids to lease operation of the ride.[16] The owners of the Astroland amusement park won the lease, with a bid of $57,000 per year.[23] After Astroland spent $60,000 to refurbish the Cyclone, the coaster reopened on July 3, 1975.[16][2]: 6–7 

Preservation[]

See caption
The Cyclone in 2010

During the 1986 season, insurance disputes forced the Cyclone to stay closed until July.[24] The Cyclone remained in operation as a separate enterprise following the 2008 closure of Astroland[25][26] and during the single operating season of Dreamland in 2009.[27] The adjacent Luna Park took over management of the Cyclone in 2011,[28][29] and began a major refurbishment of the coaster during the off-season.[30] The refurbishment, by Great Coasters International,[31] was completed in 2016.[32][33]

Current use[]

The ride covers 75 feet (23 m) at 834 Surf Avenue and 500 feet (150 m) on West 10th Street,[2]: 12  which is owned by NYC Parks.[14] The former concession stands (built into the coaster's structure) were home to the Coney Island History Project,[34] which was moved to a space near the Wonder Wheel.[35] A souvenir stand selling Cyclone-based shirts, hats, and on-ride photos remains.[34]

Each ride in Luna Park charges a number of credits for admission, with each credit typically costing $1.[36] As of July 2019, each ride on the Cyclone costs 10 credits ($10); free and reduced-price re-rides have been eliminated. Ride admission is also included in Luna Park's fixed-date and any-date passes.[37] "Bonus credits" accumulated by the purchase of ride credits cannot be used for the coaster.[36] The Cyclone is considered an "irreplaceable" structure, since timber-supported coasters can no longer be built under modern New York City building codes.[38]

Ride[]

Layout[]

The Cyclone, with high-rise apartment buildings in the background
Seen from the west

The train leaves the station heading north and immediately turns right at an almost 180-degree angle, which leads to an 85-foot (26 m) lift hill. It then moves over the first 58.1-degree drop; as the train reaches the bottom of the drop, it comes close to the track above for a headchopper effect. The train then ascends into the first high-speed U-turn to the left, descending again beneath the lift hill and rising to the second 70-foot-tall (21 m) U-turn to the right. It descends parallel to the lift hill, enters a camelback hill and rises to a smaller banked right U-turn, where it dives under the first high-speed curve. After the third U-turn, the train enters a second camelback hill with a fan turn and a smaller airtime section as it approaches a fourth U-turn to the right. The train hops several times more, paralleling the second drop, before entering a final right curve. It drops slightly, ascends into a tunnel with a small left fan turn, and enters a brake run just before re-entering the station.[39][40]

Track[]

The track is 2,640 feet (800 m) long, including six fan turns and twelve drops. The ride's top speed is 60 miles per hour (97 km/h), and each ride takes about one minute and fifty seconds. The brown wooden track has red wood fencing alongside it and has a white structural framework, giving it a distinctive appearance.[39][40][41] The steel framework is composed of vertical I-beams, horizontal tie bars, and diagonal cross-bracing beams, connected by riveted steel plates.[9]: 2  "Cyclone" appears in large, red, incandescent letters on the east and west sides of the lift hill.[9]: 3 [2]: 6  The coaster is surrounded by a fence.[9]: 3 

Before 2000, the Cyclone's 58.1-degree initial drop was the third-steepest drop of any wooden coaster in the world. As of 2014, it has the ninth-steepest drop of any wood coaster worldwide.[42]

Trains[]

The Cyclone has three three-car trains, and one train can run at a time. Riders are arranged two across in four rows, for a total of 24 riders per train. The trains have bench seating (rather than individual seats for each passenger), and a single-position lap-bar restraint system which drops across the entire row. The seats do not have headrests.[39][41][2]: 6 

Station[]

The station is accessed from the ticket booth on West 10th Street. It consists of two wooden platforms, one on each side of the track; the outer (western) platform is for riders who are boarding, and the inner (eastern) platform is for exiting riders. The station is under a gable roof canopy supported by a steel arch frame, which has segmented arcades along its sides. A mechanical room is partly underneath, and next to, the platform. A vertical sign with incandescent letters spelling "CYCLONE" is outside the station.[9]: 3 

Incidents[]

Deaths[]

See caption
As seen from West 10th Street

At least three people have died after riding the Cyclone. On May 26, 1985, a 29-year-old man was killed when he stood up and hit his head on a crossbeam.[43]

On August 23, 1988, a 26-year-old man was killed after falling from the coaster. The man, a maintenance worker, was the only passenger and was riding in the back seat during his lunch break. Apparently avoiding the safety bar, he was seen standing up as the train began its descent down the first hill. He fell 30 feet (9.1 m), landed on a crossbeam of a lower section of track and died instantly. The ride was closed after the incident, but was reopened a day later after safety inspectors concluded that it was safe.[44]

A 53-year-old man named Keith Shirasawa suffered several crushed vertebrae in his neck while riding the Cyclone on July 31, 2007. He died four days later due to complications during surgery.[45][46]

Other incidents[]

On June 12, 2008, a woman rode the Cyclone and later claimed that she had been seriously injured due to the ride. She was awarded $1.5 million in damages in 2015, despite being found partly at fault.[47] In March 2018, a man claimed to have been struck by a metal bolt while waiting in the ride queue.[48]

The Cyclone has been evacuated several times due to mechanical problems. On March 28, 2015, a mechanical failure caused a train to be stuck at the top of the lift hill; no one was injured.[49][50] On June 13 of that year, a mechanical issue caused the ride to stop completely.[51] The Cyclone stalled again on July 28, 2018, after it lost power.[52]

Notable riders and records[]

Aviator Charles Lindbergh was said to have ridden the Cyclone two years after it opened,[53] and reportedly called the experience "greater than flying an airplane at top speed".[54][38] Emilio Franco, a mute coal miner with aphonia, visited Coney Island in 1948 and reportedly screamed while going down the Cyclone's first drop. Franco also reportedly said, "I feel sick" as his train returned to the station. According to multiple accounts, he fainted after realizing that he had spoken.[2]: 6 [10][55] Although one version of the story reported that Franco had been mute since birth,[54] a contemporary New York Times story said that he had been mute for five years.[55]

Michael Boodley set a record in 1975 for the most consecutive trips on the Cyclone, riding it 1,001 times over a 45-hour period.[56] Nineteen-year-old Richard Rodriguez broke the record from August 18 to 22, 1977, riding the coaster for 104 hours. He took short bathroom breaks between rides, eating hot dogs and M&Ms and drinking shakes during the ride itself. Rodriguez broke his own record for the longest roller-coaster marathon in 2007, riding for 405 hours and 40 minutes at Blackpool Pleasure Beach in the United Kingdom.[56] In 2009, Howie Lipstein was recognized by the Coney Island History Project as having ridden the Cyclone for fifty consecutive years.[57][58] In 2019, Luna Park honored him for riding for sixty consecutive years.[59]

Replicas[]

Commemorate plaque from the American Coaster Enthusiasts
American Coaster Enthusiasts plaque

The popularity of the Cyclone has inspired seven replica coasters that share (or mirror) a similar layout.[10][60] Four replicas of the Cyclone were built at Six Flags parks: Viper at Six Flags Great America;[61][60] Psyclone at Six Flags Magic Mountain;[62][63][60] the Texas Cyclone at Six Flags AstroWorld;[64][65][60] and the Georgia Cyclone at Six Flags Over Georgia.[66][60] Of these, only Viper is still operational in its original state.[60][a] International replicas include Bandit at Movie Park Germany; the defunct White Canyon at Yomiuriland in Japan, and the defunct Aska at Japan's Nara Dreamland.[70][60]

Awards[]

Designations and recognition[]

The Cyclone was named a city landmark in 1988[2] and a National Historic Landmark in 1991.[71] An ACE Coaster Classic and Coaster Landmark,[72][73] it inspired the name of the Brooklyn Cyclones baseball team, which plays at nearby MCU Park.[74]

Rankings[]

Golden Ticket Awards: Top wood Roller Coasters
Year 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
Ranking 7[75] 8[76] 11[77] 11[78] 13[79] 16[80] 16[81] 14[82] 16[83] 14[84] 16[85] 14[86] 13[87] 15[88] 14[89] 19[90] 22[91] 16[92] 27[93] 22[94] 29[95] 28[96]

Notes[]

  1. ^ The Texas Cyclone was demolished with AstroWorld's closure in 2005,[19] Psyclone was demolished in 2007,[67] and the Georgia Cyclone was converted by Rocky Mountain Construction into Twisted Cyclone in 2018.[68][69]

References[]

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External links[]

Preceded by
Giant Dipper
World's Fastest Roller Coaster
June 1927 – April 1976
Succeeded by
Retrieved from ""