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Astroland owner: I’ll be back (maybe)!

The Brooklyn Paper

The woman who kept Coney Island’s Astroland alive during the neighborhood’s long decline only to see it close down one season too soon says she wants back into the action.

Carol Albert, who sold her land to landowner Joe Sitt, who didn’t renew her last year, says she will make a pitch to reopen the space-themed amusement park now that the city has bought her land back from Sitt.

“Of course I’ll make a proposal,” Albert told The Brooklyn Paper days after the city issued a call for bids last week to run an amusement park on an interim basis until the city can bring in a permanent theme park operator and, if it all goes to plan, transform Coney Island into a 24-7-365 resort, entertainment, retail, and games destination.

Albert said she still has all the rides — except for the water flume — from the day Astroland closed for good last year after Sitt declined to offer her a third one-year lease extension. Such extensions were necessary because Albert sold her land to Sitt in 2006 for $30 million.

“I’d like to put a new amusement park there, with all the old rides and some new,” she said. “I’d bring in lots of new rides.”

Albert, who is attending an amusement park operators’ convention in Las Vegas, expects to face serious competition from some big-time theme park owners and ride manufacturers, who are beginning to get into the amusement park game.

Experts said that they expect bids from many companies, including the one that operates the Victorian Gardens amusement park in Central Park during the summertime. That company, Zamperla, did not return a call for comment.

Neither did Jim Seay, a well-known ride manufacturer who was on a city-commissioned Coney Island advisory panel earlier this year. Seay is expected to make a bid, too.

For now, city officials, who are drumming up business at the same Vegas convention are mum.

“We’ve received great feedback so far from a number of amusement operators,” was all that David Lombino, a spokesman for the Economic Development Corporation would say.

The city request for proposals seeks “the introduction of amusement rides and ancillary uses beginning for the upcoming 2010 season and extending for a term of up to 10 years.”

It said that the city would spend $2.2 million to ready the site for next summer — though not make significant infrastructure improvements.

“It is expected that the operator will use temporary toilets and generators,” the request for proposals stated.

It is unclear if Albert even has a shot at getting the Coney contract. Though many visitors think Astroland and Coney are one and the same, the city is now partnering with her foe, Joe Sitt, in uniting to rebuild the area, with the city taking the lead on the open-air amusement park and Sitt having a great deal of control over the construction of adjacent hotels, retail and indoor amusements.

In many ways, Coney watchers say, Sitt relieved the Bloomberg administration of a big headache: what to do with the underwhelming Astroland.

Still, Albert will fight to get back.

“My heart is in Coney Island,” she said. “Everybody knows that.

“Plus, the name ‘Astroland,’ which is synonymous with Coney Island, is trademarked,” she added.

Reader Feedback

Perry from Coney Island says:
Coney Island redevelopment has become a feeding frenzy for commercial operators. Instead of all these rides induding fear lets have some classic remakes of the Steeplechase slide and swing and horse races. We don't need the biggest and the best rides. We need the safest, smartest, lowest price to ride and rides with historical relevance. But they greedy self promoting politicians and commercial interests including the folks already there today including the self proclaimed Coney Island have not a clue what CONEY ISLAND is really all about. And add to the fact governemment is now involved and you will have what you always had had. A greddy overpriced corrupted project where the people are the last to have input into the project!!!!!!!!!!! add
Nov. 17, 2009, 4:33 am
Al76 from Sheepshead Bay says:
Carol Albert is a true piece of ——. As soon as she sells he land for $30 million she wants to be back. She had years to rebuild her dump of a park, yet invested nothing. As usual it's all about the cash. Go away and die somewhere Carol. You are not the victim here.

That being said, for a multitude of reasons nothing good will ever be built in that area- not for the 2010 season, 11, 12 or ever.

It will always be a garbabge pile mainly beacuse there are too many players involved. The entire area from the Cyclone to the Keyspan park on both sides of Surf ave needs to be under the control of one and only one entity.

Everything in that area needs to be demolished. just save the actual Cyclone and Wonder Wheel and level all around them and start fresh. This is the only way.
Nov. 17, 2009, 6:47 am
mike from coney island says:
i think carol Albert should stay home
or she can take a ride on her own rides that she kept
we don't need her
Nov. 18, 2009, 12:45 pm
Cindy from Sheepshead Bay says:
My whole family has been going to Astroland all our lives. My mother, my little girl and me cried our eyes out when it closed. We were there on the last night and we'll be there on the opening day of the new Astroland. That's Coney Island. We don't want no corporate theme park coming in and making it into Six Flags.
Nov. 20, 2009, 1:27 pm

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