I think everyone is forgetting that it was Burke's regime that closed AstroWorld. I have every reason to believe that they fully intended to re-assemble all the coasters that were moved, including the standup. Shortly after AstroWorld closed, Snyder and Red Zone took over Six Flags and it was Snyder's new regime that sold off several of the parks including Darien, and that sale included the dismantled coaster on the property. So it's now two owners later and the coaster has never been reassembled. You can't expect anyone to beleive the coaster was moved two owners ago just to dump it on a park that was expected to be sold. I don't beleive Burke & Company had any plans to sell Darien, and I don't think the people in the Buffalo area who are telling you these things have any idea what they are talking about.
Agreed, and that was my point. No matter what anyone says, it doesn't make any sense whatsoever to move a ride across the country with no intention of reassembling it (not to mention purposely damaging it in order to have some sort of reasoning for letting it rot, as if "we changed our mind" wasn't enough).
-Nate
From what I heard, Darien looked into repairing or replacing the piece(s) that AstroWorld dropped during disassembly, plus the cost of reassembling the coaster and decided it just wasn't worth the money to put it up. I also heard that Zamperla offered them a very good deal and the new MotoCoaster cost less than what they would have spent to reinstall a 22 year-old standup.
I can't say that I blame them, and I too don't understand the need for all these crazy and elaborate stories concerning an old Intamin/Giovanola standup. The new owners looked into it and decided it's not worth it and they don't want it--plain and simple.
^But that does beg the question - "if you're NOT putting the ride back up, why not sell the steel track to the recyclers"? I mean, the trains might have some use for parts for other stand-ups (not sure how similar they are to the "current" stand-up trains)...but the trackage....is junk steel at this point.
Beverly Hill Cop III was filmed at Great America in CA. Alpine Sleigh closed long before the movie came out.
-Travis
www.youtube.com/TSVisits
The other thing I never understood, was how can something so easily damaged in shipment?Unless the truck rolls over, that steel is pretty strong, even if you bend part of it by lifting it, you can always cut and weld.
"Damaged in shipment" to me really means "Not worth putting back up"Im glad I got to go to Astroworld, even though it was only once.
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