Roller Coaster (Papéa Parc)

(Redirected from Beaver Land Mine Ride)

Roller Coaster is a steel roller coaster located Papéa Parc amusement park in Yvré-l'Evêque, France.[1] It was formerly known as Beaver Land Mine Ride and Roadrunner Express at Geauga Lake in Aurora, Ohio. It was a standard production model junior coaster from Zierer. It is known for having the longest train of any coaster (with 20 two-seat cars) at Papea Parc, and it is also the only coaster in the park to complete a full circuit twice while in operation.

Roller Coaster
Previously known as Road Runner Express at Six Flags Ohio/Six Flags Worlds of Adventure (2000-2003)
Beaver Land Mine Train at Geauga Lake (2004-2007)
Papéa Parc
StatusOperating
Opening date2009
Geauga Lake
NameBeaver Land Mine Ride
Coordinates41°21′13″N 81°22′32″W / 41.353494°N 81.375550°W / 41.353494; -81.375550
StatusRemoved
Opening date5 May 2000
Closing date16 September 2007
General statistics
ManufacturerZierer
DesignerWerner Stengel
ModelLarge tivoli
Track layoutDouble figure eight
Height8.0 m (26.2 ft)
Drop7.6 m (25 ft)
Length360.0 m (1,181.1 ft)
Speed36.0 km/h (22.4 mph)
Inversions0
Capacity1,250 riders per hour
TrainsSingle train with 20 cars. Riders are arranged 2 across in a single row for a total of 40 riders per train.
Roller Coaster at RCDB

This ride was installed as Roadrunner Express at Geauga Lake in 2000 and was one of three identical coasters installed in Six Flags parks that year. It was named after the Looney Tunes character Roadrunner.

In March 2004, Six Flags sold Geauga Lake to Cedar Fair. Any references to Looney Tunes characters had to be removed from the park before opening day, since Cedar Fair did not own the licensing rights to it. This change affected several rides and attractions, including Roadrunner Express. Cedar Fair renamed the coaster Beaver Land Mine Ride.

On 16 September 2007, Cedar Fair closed down all of the rides at Geauga Lake. Several of the rides began to be relocated to other amusement parks. Beaver Land Mine Ride was sold to Papéa Parc, where it has operated since as Roller Coaster.

References edit

  1. ^ "Roller Coaster - Papéa Parc (Yvré-l'Evêque, Pays de la Loire, France)". rcdb.com. Retrieved 2024-02-13.

External links edit