Skyride (Busch Gardens Tampa Bay)

SkyRide

The entrance to Skyride at Busch Gardens Tampa Bay's Crown Colony station in 2006
Busch Gardens Tampa Bay
Opening date 1974
General statistics
Attraction type Gondola ride
Manufacturer Von Roll
Designer SeaWorld Parks and Entertainment
Height 60 ft (18 m)
Speed 3 mph (4.8 km/h)
Duration 5:54
Capacity 4 riders per gondola

Skyride is a transportation attraction at Busch Gardens Tampa Bay in Tampa, Florida. It carries passengers from the Crown Colony section of the park to the Stanleyville section or vice versa.[1] During this experience, passengers get a bird's-eye view of several attractions at the park.[2]

The ride consists of a single continuous cable, held up by evenly dispersed supports. From this moving cable, dozens of cabins hang, each one carrying up to four passengers (or 680 pounds).[3] These are open cabins with four seats (two rows of two, facing each other). At each station (one at Crown Colony, one at Stanleyville), a large wheel with a pulley-like groove rotates the direction in which the cable is moving. Incoming cabins are transferred from the moving cable to a stationary steel track, along which the wheels of each cabin glide. They are brought to a stop by two park employees. While one holds the vehicle in place, the other opens the cabin door as the passengers exit. The door is then closed and the vehicle is thrust around the turn. On the other side of the large wheel, another employee re-opens the door and new passengers enter the cabin. The door is re-locked and the cabin is pushed hard enough to transfer it from the steel track to the moving cable. Once on the cable, the wheels above each cabin are not used, but the cable transporting it rests within a slot between the wheels.

The ride was manufactured by Von Roll of Berne, Switzerland and opened at the park in 1974.[4] The Skyride needed to be closed beginning in 2010 to build the Cheetah Hunt roller coaster,[5] which opened May 27, 2011.[6]

Experience

A view from one of the dozens of gondolas running on Skyride at any given time.

The following is an account of the ride from the Cheetah Hunt station to the Stanleyville station (observances while on the return trip would be in reverse order):

Passengers enter a cabin at the Cheetah Hunt station.[1] It is at this station that an enormous motor—or series of motors—powers the movement of the continuous cable for the entire ride. The vehicle catches onto the cable and the cabin begins its first ascent. For the first half of the attraction, the cabin passes over the animal area of the park, including the "Edge of Africa" and "Rhino Rally" attractions. During this portion, passengers can see various animals to one side,[7] and such attractions as Gwazi, SheiKra, and Phoenix on the other side. The cabin then descends to a checkpoint structure where a total of three giant wheels, similar to those at each station, change the direction of the cable. It is here that two employees (one monitoring the vehicles going in each direction) ensure that the cabins have enough momentum to carry themselves across the steel tracks above while making the 90-degree turn. The cabin then returns to the cable and begins its second—and final—ascent, now going perpendicular to the first half of the attraction. During the second portion, passengers can see Sand Serpent, the Timbuktu Theater and Stanley Falls Flume to one side, and Kumba to the other side.[8] The cabin then descends to a station at the opposite end of the park, where existing passengers exit the ride and new passengers make the return trip.

During Howl-O-Scream, the Skyride is closed due to a haunted house occupying the Crown Colony station. The Skyride queue and the old Veldt Monorail station are used as waiting areas as well. However, as of the 2010 Howl-O-Scream, that haunted house was moved to a different location in Busch Gardens due to the construction on Cheetah Hunt.[6]

Glossary of terms

The bullwheel at the Stanleyville station

Incidents

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Entertainment, SeaWorld Parks &. "Skyride". seaworldparks.com. Retrieved 2016-05-15.
  2. Hinman, Michael (April 4, 2008). "Busch Gardens has high hopes for newest attraction, Jungala". Tampa Bay Business Journal. Retrieved 2009-06-06. "A bridge leading from the new Jungala area can be seen from the SkyRide at Busch Gardens."
  3. "Skyride at Busch Gardens Tampa". Theme Park Insider. Retrieved 2016-05-15.
  4. McMorrow-Hernandez, Joshua (2015-04-27). Tampa Bay Landmarks and Destinations. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9781467113663.
  5. "Busch Gardens to close Skyride temporarily to make room for unidentified thrill ride". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved 2016-05-15.
  6. 1 2 "Skyride Review | Busch Gardens Tampa". Total Orlando. Retrieved 2016-05-15.
  7. Sehlinger, Bob; Kubersky, Seth (2015-12-08). Beyond Disney: The Unofficial Guide to SeaWorld, Universal Orlando, & the Best of Central Florida. Unofficial Guides. ISBN 9781628090444.
  8. "Skyride at Busch Gardens | Aerial View | Crown Colony to Edge of Africa". orlandotouristinformationbureau.com. Retrieved 2016-05-15.
  9. "USF football player injured in fall from Busch Gardens' Skyride". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved 2016-05-15.
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