Luna Park (other)
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Luna Park (other)
Luna Park is the name of multiple amusement parks (see ). Luna Park, Lunar Park, or Lunapark may also refer to: Amusement parks * Chutes Park (also known as Luna Park), Los Angeles * Estadio Luna Park, Buenos Aires * Europark Idroscalo Milano (formerly known as Lunapark), Milan * Luna Park, Alexandria * Luna Park, Berlin * Luna Park, Cairo * Luna Park, Charleston * Luna Park, Chicago * Luna Park, Cleveland * Luna Park (Coney Island, 1903) * Luna Park (Coney Island, 2010) * Luna Park, Denver * Luna Park, Detroit * Luna Park Glenelg * Luna Park Hamburg-Altona * Luna Park, Houston * Luna Park, Johnstown, Pennsylvania * Luna Park, Leipzig * Luna Park, Melbourne * Luna Park, Olcott Beach * Luna Park, Osaka * Luna Park, Paris * Luna Park, Pittsburgh * Luna Park, San Jose * Luna Park, Schenectady * Luna Park, Scranton * Luna Park, Seattle * Luna Park, St. Petersburg * Luna Park Sydney * Luna Park, Tel Aviv * Luna Park, Tokyo * LunEur (also known as Luna Park Permanente di Roma), Rome * S ...
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Luna Park
Luna Park is a name shared by dozens of currently operating and defunct amusement parks. They are named after, and partly based on, the first Luna Park, which opened in 1903 during the heyday of large Coney Island parks. Luna parks are small-scale attraction parks, easily accessed, potentially addressed to the permanent or temporary residential market, and located in the suburbs or even near the town center. Luna parks mainly offer classic funfair attractions (great wheel), newer features (electronic displays) and catering services. History The original Luna Park on Coney Island, a massive spectacle of rides, ornate towers and cupolas covered in 250,000 electric lights, was opened in 1903 by the showmen and entrepreneurs Frederic Thompson and Elmer "Skip" Dundy. The park was either named after the fanciful airship Luna, part of the new park's central attraction A Trip to the Moon, or after Dundy's sister. Luna Park was a vastly expanded attraction built partly on the grounds of ...
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Luna Park, Johnstown
Originally known as Roxbury Park, Luna Park was an amusement park located near Johnstown, Pennsylvania, USA. Located by a loop at the end of the Franklin Street line of the Johnstown Passenger Railway Company, the park was centered on an artificial lake that was surrounded by a racetrack (originally for harness racing, but other forms of racing were presented there over the years)Randy Whittle, ''Johnstown, Pennsylvania: a History, Volume 1'' (History Press 2007) Throughout its existence, the park had picnic facilities. In 1905, the trolley park added amusement rides and attractions, including many that now are considered mainstays for such facilities. Locally popular, the park was beset with an instability of ownership until it was purchased by the City of Johnstown on 18 July 1922. Subsequently, the park's name was reverted to Roxbury Park. Eventually the mechanical rides and the racetrack disappeared from the grounds as Roxbury Park became a municipal park. History City founder ...
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Luna Park, Tel Aviv
Luna Park, Tel Aviv is an amusement park complex in the Israel Trade Fairs & Convention Center, Tel Aviv Fairgrounds. History The Luna Park was established in 1970. Luna Park attractions include Ferris wheels, bumper cars, carousels and roller coasters. In its early days, entrance was free and visitors paid only for rides. There is also an Israeli Children's song called "Daddy, let's go to Luna Park" (Hebrew Title: אבא'לה בוא ללונה פארק) written in the 1950s. Attractions Roller coasters Flat rides Former attractions References {{reflist External links Luna Park, Tel Aviv website
Amusement parks in Israel Buildings and structures in Tel Aviv Tourist attractions in Tel Aviv 1970 establishments in Israel ...
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Luna Park Sydney
Luna Park Sydney is a heritage-listed amusement park located at 1 Olympic Drive in the harbourside suburb of Milsons Point, New South Wales, Australia, on the northern shore of Sydney Harbour. The amusement park is owned by the Luna Park Reserve Trust, an agency of the Government of New South Wales, and was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 5 March 2010. The park was constructed during 1935 approximately from the northern approaches of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, and ran for seventy-month seasons until 1972, when it was opened year-round. Luna Park was closed in mid-1979, immediately following the Ghost Train fire, which killed six children and one adult. Most of the park was demolished, and a new amusement park was constructed; this originally operated under the name of Harbourside Amusement Park before resuming the Luna Park name. The park was closed again in 1988 as an independent engineering inspection determined that several rides needed urgent repa ...
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Luna Park, St
Luna commonly refers to: * Earth's Moon, named "Luna" in Latin * Luna (goddess), the ancient Roman personification of the Moon Luna may also refer to: Places Philippines * Luna, Apayao * Luna, Isabela * Luna, La Union * Luna, San Jose Romania * Luna, Negrești-Oaș town, Satu Mare County * Luna, Cluj * Luna de Jos, Dăbâca Commune, Cluj County * Luna de Sus, Florești, Cluj * Luna River United States * Luna, Arkansas * Luna, Missouri * Luna, Minnesota * Luna, New Mexico * Luna County, New Mexico * Luna Island, in Niagara Falls, New York * Luna Lake (Arizona), a natural body of water * Luna Pier, Michigan, a city Other places * Luna (Etruria), a city in ancient Etruria (now Italy) destroyed by the Arabs in 1016 * Luna, Aragon, Spain * Luna, Rajasthan, India * Luna forest, on the north bank of the Danube, according to Ptolemy * Luna Peak (other) * Roverè della Luna, a commune in Italy * Luna, former name of Louny, a town in the Czech Republic Arts, entertainment an ...
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Luna Park, Seattle
Luna Park was an amusement park in Seattle, Washington that operated from 1907 until 1913. Designed by famed carousel carver Charles I. D. Looff, who carved and installed Coney Island's very first carousel, Luna Park took its name from Coney Island's Luna Park. On July 4, 1908, Luna Park became the site of Seattle's first manned flight. History Construction, opening The park was constructed near the Duwamish Head on the northern tip of Alki Point in West Seattle. Construction started in 1906, headed by Charles I. D. Looff. Built on pilings, the expansive boardwalk extended over Elliott Bay and was called the Greatest Amusement Park on the West Coast. Luna Park was accessible by the West Seattle ferry or the Seattle Municipal Railway's Luna Park Line. During evening hours the park was brilliantly illuminated, with each building and ride outlined in bulbs. Because of its extravagant lighting scheme the park could be seen for miles and was billed as a safe nighttime destination ...
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Luna Park, Scranton
Luna Park, an amusement park in Scranton, Pennsylvania, Scranton, Pennsylvania, from 1906 to 1916, initially designed, built, and operated by two companies affiliated with amusement park pioneer Frederick Ingersoll, occupied a mostly western-facing 20-acre tract of land on Moosic Mountain along the eastern side of Roaring Brook Falls, Roaring Brook gorge, opposite present-day Nay Aug Park. No historical marker commemorates the site of the park. Inception Despite similar names, the park is not affiliated with Thompson & Dundy's park on Coney Island in popular culture, Coney Island, New York, USA, or the "Hippodrome". Thompson & Dundy, however, first promoted ideas of franchising in August 1904 but did not file for trademark or copyright protection. Although many types of parks, exhibitions, and entertainment attractions existed at this time, Ingersoll capitalized on standardization, following a formula that characterizes all his "Luna Parks": the first two, in Pittsburgh and Clev ...
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Luna Park, Schenectady
Luna Park was one of several names for an amusement park that existed in Rexford, New York, near Schenectady, from 1901 to 1933. In addition to Luna Park (the name given by developer/entrepreneur Frederick Ingersoll when he added rides and assumed control of Rexford Park in 1906), it was also known as Dolle's Park (named after Fred Dolle, who bought the park from Ingersoll in 1912), Colonnade Park, Palisades Park, and (again) Rexford Park (in 1916) before the rides were dismantled in 1933.Susan Rosenthal, ''Schenectady'' (Arcadia 2000) Description of Rexford Park's amusement stand
- Capital District Library Council
John L. Scherer, ''Clifton Park'' (Arcadia 1996) Constructed around the Grand View Hotel (built and ...
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Luna Park, San Jose
Luna Park is a neighborhood in San Jose, California. It is bounded by Old Oakland Road/13th Street, Berryessa Road/Highway 101 and North 17th Street. It is named after the Luna Park amusement park An amusement park is a park that features various attractions, such as rides and games, as well as other events for entertainment purposes. A theme park is a type of amusement park that bases its structures and attractions around a central ... built by Audley Ingersoll's of Ingersoll's Amusement and financed by the San Jose Street Car Company as a way of bringing more customers to the area. Luna Park was located on San Jose's Oakland Road, now named North 13th Street and contained an amusement park, baseball stadium and public park from the early 1907 until 1921. It was later redeveloped into a city park and residential neighborhood that still bears the name Luna Park. Parks and plazas There is a park named Luna Park within the neighborhood. Backesto Park is located nearby i ...
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Luna Park, Pittsburgh
Luna Park was an amusement park in the North Oakland neighborhood of the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, from 1905 to 1909.Luna Park's luminary: Entrepreneur/roller coaster designer deserves his due
- '''', 1 September 2008
Constructed and owned by , the park occupied a 16 acre hilly site bounded on the south by Atlantic Avenue (now Baum Boulevard) and on the west by North Craig Street, and included

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Luna Park, Paris
Luna Park was an amusement park near Porte Maillot in Paris, France Paris () is the Capital city, capital and List of communes in France with over 20,000 inhabitants, most populous city of France, with an estimated population of 2,165,423 residents in 2019 in an area of more than 105 km² (41 sq mi), ma ... from 1907 (or 1909) to 1931.Postcards of Luna Park, Paris
- captions in French
Features of the park included a shoot-the-chutes ride, a Roller_coaster#Scenic_railways, scenic railway, "Le Chatouilleur" ("Diabolic wheels", a roller coaster-type ride in which people ride in a car that rocks as it is pulled up a mountain), a river ride through the mountain that was the base of the scenic railway, and a dance hall. An additional attraction was named the Bro ...
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Luna Park, Osaka
Osaka's Luna Park (''Runa pāku'', also known as Shinsekai Luna Park) was Japan's second amusement park of the same name, replacing the destroyed Luna Park in Tokyo. In operation from 1912 to 1923, the 132,000 square meter park in the Shinsekai section of Osaka featured a unique entrance: an aerial tramway from the original Tsutenkaku Tower. History The park was constructed and owned by Ken'ichi Kawaura after he sold his interest in the Japanese motion picture company Yoshizawa Shōten to Shōkichi Umeya in the wake of the destruction by fire of Luna Park, Tokyo and two Osaka theaters in 1911. Prior to the suspicious fires, all three were owned by the film studio. Rather than rebuilding in Tokyo, Kawaura decided to build his second Luna Park in Shinsekai ("New World"), an Osaka subdivision that was under construction at the time. At the same time, the original Tsutenkaku Tower was being built in nearby Tsutenkaku to the north. Plans were being made to connect the tower ...
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