- Expedition Everest
Infobox Disney ride
name=Expedition Everest - Legend of the Forbidden Mountain
caption=Ride logo
park=Disney's Animal Kingdom
land=Asia
designer=Walt Disney Imagineering
manufacturer=Vekoma
type=Roller coaster
theme=Himalayan expedition
control_system=
propulsion=Chain lift
soft_opened=
opened=April 7, 2006
closed=
host=
music=
vehicle_type=
vehicle_names=
guests_per_vehicle=34
cars_per_vehicle=6
guests_per_car=6 (first 5 cars)/4 (back car)
duration=3-4
length=4424
attraction_height=199.5
track_height=112
custom_label_1=Forward speed
custom_value_1=50 mph (80 km/h)
custom_label_2=Backward speed
custom_value_2=40 mph (64 km/h)
height_requirement=44
site_area=
lift_count=2
audio-animatronics=Yeti, Bird
custom_label_3=Type
custom_value_3=Steel
custom_label_4=Drop
custom_value_4=80 ft
custom_label_5=
custom_value_5=
custom_label_6=
custom_value_6=
custom_label_7=
custom_value_7=
custom_label_8=
custom_value_8=
sponsor=
fastpass=yes
single_rider=yes
accessible=
transfer_accessible=
assistive_listening=
cc=Expedition Everest - Legend of the Forbidden Mountain is an elaborately themed
roller coaster atDisney's Animal Kingdom theme park in theWalt Disney World Resort .Background
Expedition Everest is often compared to the 1959
Matterhorn Bobsleds roller coaster atDisneyland , which also features a snowy mountain setting and an "abominable snowman " figure throughout the ride.Although moderate in height and length by contemporary roller coaster standards, Expedition Everest is unique for having its trains travel forward and backward as a result of the yeti's interference with the journey. This is accomplished through two sets of rotating track segments on pivot before and after the backwards segment. In its publicity material, Disney pointedly has described the attraction as a "family" thrill ride.
Expedition Everest is the tallest of the artificial mountains at Walt Disney World Resort, joining
Big Thunder Mountain Railroad ,Mount Gushmore , Space Mountain,Splash Mountain and Mount Mayday on the list of Disney-built peaks. According to Imagineering, it is Disney's 18th mountain-themed attraction. If the Expedition Everest mountain were real, it would be ranked fourth on the list of the [http://americasroof.com/highest/fl.shtml highest summits in Florida] at convert|320|ft|m above sea level.The artificial mountain is not a reproduction of
Mount Everest ; it is the fictional "forbidden mountain" guarded by theyeti in the attraction story created byWalt Disney Imagineering . Everest is represented by the barren background peak on the far right, which is meant to suggest it is far in the distance (an example offorced perspective ). The attraction's conceit is that the roller coaster is a passenger train offering a speedy route through theHimalayas to the base ofMount Everest .According to Disney, the attraction occupies convert|6.2|acre|m2 in the park's Asia section and the mountain itself is just shy of one acre.
Expedition Everest celebrated its grand opening on
April 7 ,2006 in ceremonies led by Disney CEOBob Iger and theme parks chairmanJay Rasulo . The attraction first was announced publicly onApril 22 ,2003 , during an event to celebrate the fifth anniversary ofDisney's Animal Kingdom .tory
Walt Disney Imagineering spent six years researching, designing and building Expedition Everest, including many trips to the
Himalayas to collect reference material and observations. The resulting attraction is a fictionalized telling of the legend of the yeti, using an imaginary setting created with meticulous re-creations of Himalayan (Nepali) architecture, art and cultural traditions.Riders approach the attraction through the remote village of Serka Zong in the fictional kingdom of Anandapur, which is located in the foothills of the Himalayas, northern part of India. Several village buildings that had been used by the Royal Anandapur Tea Company have been repurposed by businesses that send trekkers on various expeditions throughout the Himalayas. "Expedition Everest" is the name of a specific trek arranged by the Himalayan Escapes tour company in Serka Zong.
The entrepreneurs behind Himalayan Escapes, Norbu and Bob, have refurbished a steam train (Darjeeling Ko Rail) that previously had been used to bring harvested tea leaves down from the mountains. It's these trains the Expedition Everest trekkers board on their way to the base camp of
Mount Everest , using a shortcut that passes through the "forbidden mountain" thought to be guarded by the yeti. Among local cultures, the yeti is believed to be a fierce protector of the region's most pristine mountains, valleys and forests, and violently opposes man's encroachment in these areas.As riders wind their way through the attraction's richly detailed standby queue, half of which is climate controlled, the legend of the yeti is communicated vividly through a
mandir , a kind of Himalayan shrine to the yeti, and a makeshift museum that documents yeti sightings, its significance in Himalayan cultures and a so-called "lost" expedition that ran afoul of the creature in 1982 while attempting to reach Everest through the Forbidden Mountain pass. Near the end of the yeti museum, two notices hang on the wall — one written by the museum's curator, warning against the railroad expeditions, and another by the owner of the expedition company, stating that the curator's notice "does not represent the opinions or views" of the company. The shorterFASTPASS queue contains a similar but abbreviated storyline. The queues merge in the enclosed train station behind the loading area.One of the attraction's highlights is an encounter with a large Audio-Animatronic
yeti , which Disney claims is one of the largest and most complex figures it has ever built.Joe Rohde , the leadImagineer for Expedition Everest, has noted that the yeti featured in the attraction is extremely lifelike and based on extensive research into the cultural legend.Mission Himalayas
In 2005, Disney, Discovery Networks and
Conservation International conducted real-life expeditions toChina andNepal as part of the promotion for Expedition Everest. The purpose was to conduct scientific and cultural research in remote areas of the Himalayas where the yeti legend exists. Participants included scientists fromConservation International and Disney's Animal Kingdom, as well as Rohde.The expeditions — as well as the making of the attraction — were chronicled in three documentaries broadcast on Discovery's cable television channels in April 2006. Rohde was featured in a
Travel Channel program titled "Expedition Everest: Journey to Sacred Lands," which premieredApril 9 to coincide with the attraction's grand opening.Times Square publicity stunt
On
February 15 , 2006, Disney staged an elaborate publicity stunt for Expedition Everest inNew York City 'sTimes Square , according to a report by radio station WINS::"Dangling from ropes hundreds of feet above Times Square, five acrobatic dancers and one of the world's fastest rock climbers performed cartwheels, flips and gravity-defying leaps Wednesday to promote the opening of a new ride at Walt Disney World. . . . Strapped into harnesses and hanging from nylon rope, [Hans] Florine and five other performers from the vertical dance company Project Bandaloop twirled and soared across the face of the billboard, which was done up to look like a mountainside."
The event, known as "Everest in the City", draped large billboards over sides of the several buildings. The billboards depicted Everest with a coaster car careening down the mountainside, with the Yeti looking on from another peak.
The Yeti's eyes on the billboard glowed red and would flash when the text message "4YETI" was sent to a Disney-provided phone number.
Attraction facts
* Capacity: Up to five six-car trains of 34 passengers each in 17 two-person rows (the last row features seating for disabled guests); typically four trains are in operation, with a projected OHRC of 1,850 riders per hour with four trains or 2,050 with five trains.
* Restraint: Individual lap bar
* Brake zones: Four; two after the pivoting track segments, one before entering the mountain the final time and one before unload. Technically the brake after the yeti encounter is not considered an official brake zone
* Lifts: Two chain lifts
* Trackswitches: Weighing in at 100 tons each, they roll and lock in 6 seconds.
* "Disney's FASTPASS" can be utilized at this area.Yeti technical details
The complex yeti figure has the following technical details [citeweb|url=http://machinedesign.com/ContentItem/58140/EngineeringExpeditionEverestcompletewithayeti.aspx|title=Engineering Expedition Everest,complete with a yeti|publisher=Machine Design|date=2006-08-10] .
* The yeti's "skin" measures convert|1000|sqft|m2, and is held in place by 1,000 snaps and 250 zippers.
* The yeti's movement is controlled by 19actuators .
* The yeti can move five feet horizontally, and two feet vertically.
* The yeti is convert|22|ft|m tall.Incidents
* On
December 18 ,2007 , a 44-year-old guest was found unconscious after the train returned to the station. The guest was taken to a local hospital, but was pronounced dead. A preliminary autopsy by the Orange County medical examiner's office concluded that the victim died ofdilated cardiomyopathy , and that the death was considered natural. [http://580wdbo.com/includes/news/indepth/03279_Death-at-Disney_115236.html]Awards
* 2006 Theme Park Insider Award for "World's Best New Theme Park Attraction."
References
External links
* [http://disneyworld.disney.go.com/wdw/parks/attractionDetail?id=ExpeditionEverestPage Official Expedition Everest page within disneyworld.com]
* [http://www.sptimes.com/2005/12/11/Travel/A_new_peak_for_Disney.shtml "A new peak for Disney" - St. Petersburg Times article on Expedition Everest] (Dec. 11, 2005)
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