Status Closed Designer John Pierce Closed 14 January 2013 Height restriction 1.3 m | Height 35 m Max speed 84 km/h Opened 9 April 1994 | |
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Opening date April 9, 1994 (1994-04-09) Closing date January 14, 2013 (2013-01-14) Similar Bandit, White Cyclone, Crazy Hyuuuu - Crazy sto, Loop Coaster MOMOnGA, Giant Sky River |
White Canyon (Japanese: ホワイトキャニオン) was a wooden roller coaster at the Yomiuriland amusement park near Inagi, Tokyo, Japan. It was one of the first wooden roller coasters in Japan, and it was one of the largest Cyclone-style roller coasters in the world.
Contents
History and construction
Prior to 1994, when White Canyon was constructed, there was only one wooden roller coaster, Jupiter (built in 1992), which had ever been built in Japan. This was largely due to strict, earthquake-related building codes which restricted the height of wooden structures in Japan.
White Canyon was built as a collaboration of Roller Coaster Corporation of America, TOGO, Morgan Manufacturing, and John Pierce Associates. The coaster was constructed out of 2,360 cubic meters (one million board feet) of southern yellow pine and the construction involved extensive prefabrication in the United States before the components were shipped for final assembly at Yomiuriland.
Track layout and ride experience
The layout of the White Canyon was quite similar to the famous Coney Island Cyclone. Before White Canyon was closed in 2013, it was the longest—1,100 metres (3,600 ft)—and tallest—35 metres (115 ft)—Cyclone-layout roller coaster in the world. The ride produced fairly high lateral G-forces of up to 1.5 lateral Gs.
Before it closed in early 2013, a single ride on the White Cyclone cost ¥900. The ride was restricted to individuals who were above 1.3 metres (4 ft 3 in) in height. It was also restricted to riders under 60 years of age and at least in junior high school.
Closure
White Canyon was closed on January 14, 2013. A total of 5.35 million people rode on White Canyon during its 19 years of operation. In its last year of operation, Yomiuriland organized a "White Canyon Thank You" campaign that involved the planting of thousands of trees. The campaign received funding from several environmental and government organizations.