Quantcast

Big news for Coney! Big gun to run theme park this summer

Big news for Coney! Big gun to run theme park this summer
Malcolm Pinckney

Coney Island’s going back to the big time, as the city announced last Wednesday that the amusement wizards behind the popular Victorian Gardens theme park will begin running an amusement park by the Boardwalk this summer — and they’re using the throwback name Luna Park!

Zamperla, an Italy-based manufacturer of amusement park rides that has also gotten into the theme park business with its popular attraction in Manhattan’s Central Park every summer, has won the city contract for an unspecified, but up to 10-year, run as the faded funhouse’s newest, biggest draw.

Zamperla CEO and President Alberto Zamperla wasn’t talking on Wednesday.
Malcolm Pinckney

The contract comes with big expectations: the Economic Development Corporation has a much broader vision of a revived Coney Island that will see the former People’s Playground transformed into a 24-7, all-year entertainment, amusement, games and retail zone — one that will take at least a decade to realize.

Until that Xanadu can be built, Zamperla will bring in its rides — though the actual amusements remain undecided — and begin operating by this summer.

Rides by Zamperla include the Halfpipe (above), the Powersurge and a carousel.

“We’re excited,” said EDC spokesman Dave Lombino. “But we can’t comment on the rides or the selection process until the agreement is finalized.”

Though details remain sketchy, the EDC did require all would-be interim operators to provide an “open and affordable” pay-as-you-go experience in Coney. Zamperla’s track record in that area includes the Victorian Gardens operation, which offers an all-day unlimited rides pass for $21.50 that has proven very popular.

Nearby attraction operators are excited to see such a big name coming to Coney Island. Dennis Vourderis, manager of the enormous Deno’s Wonder Wheel Park, said he and his father have been working with the amusement titan since 1979.

“They’ve been around a long time and they’re still qualified,” Vourderis said. “Plus, a rising tide raises all ships, so we’re happy to hear the news.”

The announcement of an interim operator is great news for many Coney boosters, though it's still a far cry from the city's long-term vision, seen in this 2008 rendering.
NYC EDC

Zamperla CEO Alberto Zamperla told his hometown newspaper, Il Giornale di Vincenza, that the amusement area would be named Luna Park, in honor of one of the four original theme parks that made Coney Island an internationally known brand. Luna Park operated from 1903 until burning down in 1945.

The new Luna Park will eventually operate on all three parcels of land between the former Astroland site and Keyspan Park that the city bought from major Coney landowner Joe Sitt last year — though only the Astroland plot at Surf Avenue and West 10th Street is required to be ready by this summer.

This was Coney Island last year — a sad summer of long faces.
The Brooklyn Paper / Shannon Geis

Astroland’s former owner Carol Albert, who initially hoped to bid for the interim amusement park, said Zamperla’s winning bid was bittersweet.

“Reluctantly, we pulled out at the last minute because we could not possibly put [a proposal] together in the six weeks that the [EDC] required,” said Albert, who sold her land to Sitt in 2006 and ran her park as a renter until 2008. “But Zamperla will provide great rides and a beautiful experience like they did with Victorian Gardens.”

The original Luna Park made Coney Island a national landmark, a name synonymous with fun.

Zamperla got the city contract over a handful of American would-be operators, including Ripley Entertainment, Atlantic City Steel Pier, International Great Wolf Resorts, Six Flags, the Rockwell Group and Palace Entertainment.

The city plans to spend $2.2 million, mostly to bring in electrical generators and portable toilets, though Zamperla is expected to build permanent restrooms and take over the electric bill in future years.

The original Luna Park made Coney Island a national landmark, a name synonymous with fun.