Castles N' Coasters

Castles ~N~ Coasters

Slogan Arizona's Finest Family Fun and Thrill Park
Location 9445 North Metro Parkway East, Phoenix, Arizona, USA
Coordinates 33°34′20″N 112°07′08″W / 33.5723°N 112.1188°W / 33.5723; -112.1188Coordinates: 33°34′20″N 112°07′08″W / 33.5723°N 112.1188°W / 33.5723; -112.1188
General Manager Darsey Grantham
Opened 1976
Operating season All year
Rides
Total 14
Roller coasters 2
Water rides 2
Website Official website

Castles N' Coasters is an amusement park and family amusement center located in Phoenix, Arizona. The approximately 10-acre (40,000 m2) park features four outdoor 18-hole miniature golf courses, several rides, and an indoor video game arcade. The park was built in 1976, and is designed in a Middle-Eastern motif though other eras are featured such as the Wild West-themed miniature golf course and log flume ride.

Other attractions includes a go-kart track, bumper cars, bumper boats, 2 roller coasters called Patriot and Desert Storm, some thrill rides including Magic Carpet, Sea Dragon, Free Fall and Sky Diver drop rides, and a log flume called Splashdown.

History

In 1976, the entertainment park originally opened under the name "Golf n' Stuff". It later turned into "Castles N' Coasters" in 1992 after adding its Ride Park.

Rides and attractions

Incidents

On May 1, 2005, eleven people were left stranded for nearly three hours after a free fall ride malfunctioned. Reports indicate that the floorless, four-sided passenger cabin jerked as it ascended the tower. The cabin, guided by cables, normally drops to the bottom of the 120-foot-tall tower and comes to a stop, however when it reached the halfway point on its ascent, it made loud screeching noises and came to a sudden halt. It took firefighters nearly three hours to rescue the riders, who were locked in their seats about 30 feet above the ground.

The park's manager says that the ride will be closed until investigators determine what caused the malfunction.

"We don't know what happened," he said.

On March 30, 2015, two young boys suffered burns when the bumper boat they were in caught fire.[1]

On November 28, 2015, a twelve-year-old boy named Dominick Leal was seriously injured after falling from a water log flume ride called: the "Splashdown" after standing during the ride, and required emergency brain surgery.[2]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.