I think SFDL's being in the middle of nowhere really does add to the country theme the park seems to attempt.
Though I've only seen it in pics and videos, Ocean Park in Hong Kong was mentioned earlier, and the view from their mine train coaster must be awesome to see in person.
http://www.rcdb.com/ig1233.htm?picture=1
http://www.rcdb.com/ig1233.htm?picture=8
http://www.rcdb.com/ig1233.htm?picture=14
And the whole area around Hershey, let alone the park itself in very beautiful. With the rolling hills on the outside, and the way the whole park is seated...very cool. *** Edited 7/20/2006 3:02:59 AM UTC by Floorless Fan***
Most interesing view OF a park I saw was from the Pinnacle, which is an overlook along the Appalachians. Some friends and I were there hiking and watching for raptors (the bird kind, not the coaster). The sky was clear enough that day, and the binoculars strong enough that if you looked in the distance, we actually spotted the red top of Steel Force's lift hill. That has to be 20-25 miles away as the crow flies. So that day we saw a few raptors and a hyper.
Cedar Point's location is simply amazing, no other park has that kind of visual impact on you.
Second would have to be Knoebel's. The rides just seem to be one with the absolutly gorgeous setting.
-Brent Kneebush
Example: Dollywood, which is built in a narrow valley between two large hills/mountains, is in a spectacular location.
Busch Gardens Africa is *not* built in a spectacular location. In fact, it's essentially built in a ghetto. It's a beautiful park, sure, but there's not spectacular about its surroundings.
Again, this isn't about the most beautiful parks. It's about the most beautiful areas that parks have been built in.
-Nate
"Would you like to buy a photo of you boys enjoying the Line Ride?"
LC has a mountain and a lake right in the park, CP is at the end of that peninsula jutting into Lake Erie. DW is within sight of the Great Smokies.
There are others of course, too.
Arthur Bahl
-Nate
It's located a good distance up a mountain overlooking the town of Glenwood Springs. You get great views of the Colorado and Roaring Fork Rivers as well as mountain vistas.
coasterdude318 said:
Yes, since it's built in a Florida swamp. I fail to see anything spectacular about that location.-Nate
Of course, that would be true if it wasn't themed at all, but it is. The setting of the park is amazing, with crazy detail in Asia and Africa.
The theming inside the park has nothing to do with the physical setting of the park. That was all created as part of the park. Animal Kingdom was built in a swamp. There's nothing spectacular about it.
As I just said a few posts above yours, this isn't about the most beautiful parks. It's about the most spectacular areas that parks have been built in.
-Nate
The thread is not about what's inside the park, it's about what's around it - the location in which it's built.
Oh, I give up.
-Nate
*** Edited 7/21/2006 5:39:12 AM UTC by coasterdude318***
And I do think CP has a great location for when youre driving in on the causeway. What a View!
I also like the river that BGE has flowing through it, and seeing alpengeists cobra roll and Lochness' interlocking loops is really a kodak moment.
Chain of Rocks was another good park. It was on a bluff overlookig the Mississippi river. They also had the scariest skylift ever. Think Indiana Beach with no way to stop it and only 20 feet to a 60 foot drop. Getting on the ride was always an adventure.
*** Edited 7/21/2006 5:31:11 PM UTC by Frantic Ferret***
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