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In 2006 the Sally Corporation and Hard Rock Park asked Attraction Design Services to design and build most of the show elements for this unique dark ride. We delivered beyond expectations with elaborate special effects, complex media, audio, show control and lighting. One of the innovations that we developed for this attraction included a 65 foot long projection tunnel equipped for image correction sychronized with the ride system. Another amazing technology we designed for the attraction allowed passengers to ride directly through a ghostly image of a mystical maiden. We also created "lava blobs" that "explode" above riders, billowowing satin sheets with ethereal images fading in and out and wisps of smoke that transform into faces.
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"I think you guys did a great job of sticking to it to the end and getting a very professional job done in the process. I’m proud of you guys and the ride and particularly appreciate the “can do” attitude you’ve maintained throughout…From my vantage point, it looks fantastic! Great job to you both!” John Wood, CEO, Sally Corporation |
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One of the most amazing dark ride’s ever was unfortunately one of the shortest-lived. Nights in White Satin – The Trip was a multi-sensory dark ride that opened with Hard Rock Park in 2008...Designers were able to create an incredible and unique dark ride based on the famous Moody Blues’ song. It all came together to create one of the most disorienting dark rides ever.
Unfortunately, after the bankruptcy, sale, and retheme of the park, Nights In White Satin was ripped apart and replaced with the much less impressive “Monstars of Rock” in 2009, which included the removal of most of the elements that made this attraction so great.
Even though I was lucky enough to ride this amazing creation, its extremely hard to explain what exactly this ride is.
Ethan Conners, Author, Park Thoughts Magazine
Review of Night In White Satin - The Trip
By Arthur Levine, About.com
Located in the British Invasion section of the Hard Rock Park, guests pass through what appears to be a giant psychedelic album cover and towards a spinning, mesmerizing black spiral. With Moody Blues cuts playing in the background, the queue includes some band and ride curios such as a Mellotron (a keyboard that preceded the synthesizer and helped define the Moodies' signature sound), a torso onto which colored lights are projected, and a larger-than-life white knight (minus the satin).
Ride operators distribute 3-D glasses...and tell guests, with nary an ironic wink, to "have a good trip." Black lights make the 2-D, Day-Glo-adorned walls shimmer and invariably cause 3-D-bespectacled trippers to reach out and grab the illusory images floating in the air.
The loading area accommodates two vehicles at a time. Each vehicle has two benches and can handle up to six passengers. After the safety bar lowers and a ride-op clears the vehicles, the trip begins.
As with any attraction, particularly one as unique as Nights in White Satin- The Trip, you may want to skip the description that follows until you've experienced the ride.
The song, which was first released in 1967 and clocked in at nearly eight minutes, was re-recorded by the band. The onboard speakers are superb and provide a sonic underpinning for the heady atmosphere.
As Justin Hayward sings, "Nights in white satin, Never reaching the end, Letters I've written, Never meaning to send," ethereal 3-D specters--in white satin, apparently--greet passengers. A bleak and barren landscape then slowly fills with bright colors.
Like the inscrutable song, there's no linear story or literal meaning to the attraction. Sometimes the lyrics seem connected to the visuals and effects; mostly, however, the sights, sounds, and sensations wash over riders in a stream of altered consciousness. Impossibly vivid Peter Max-style cubes and peace signs spin in midair; pulsating globules that appear to have been hijacked from the light show of a circa-1969 Grateful Dead concert explode and bring a rain of droplets onto passengers; blasts of air compete for attention with stylized renderings of free-spirited dancers. Whoa! It's heavy, man.
Nights in White Satin makes great use of an old dark ride trick, the speed room. (A holdover from the If You Had Wings attraction it replaced, the Buzz Lightyear ride in Tomorrowland at Florida's Walt Disney World includes a speed room.) The cars slowly move forward in a domed room onto which an enveloping movie depicting forward motion is projected. Much like a motion simulator ride, this creates the odd sensation of moving in sync with with the film and into its surreal imagery.
Towards the end of the ride, after the Moody Blues intone, "But we decide which is right. And which is an illusion," there is a great scene built around the song's trademark gong finale. I've probably revealed far too much already. You'll have to experience it for yourself.
The mythical nights in white satin may never reach the end. But the attraction does. While a never-ending ride would be absurd, it would have been great if the four-plus minute attraction could have been nearly doubled to fit the original song's length. It's so much fun, so weird, and so well done, it begs for more. And it would have been fascinating to see what the ride's designers could have done with an expanded palette. Then again, this is one trip that can easily be rebooked by getting back in line.
Please click here for excerpts taken from an article entitled "SMOKE & MIRRORS: THE ANATOMY OF NIGHTS IN WHITE SATIN." By Martin Palicki - In Park magazine. |
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8297 ChampionsGate Blvd. Suite 306 ChampionsGate, Florida 33896 :: Phone: 888.823.4440
info@attractiondesignservices.com