Matterhorn Bobsleds Return to Full Operational Capacity After Lengthy Refurbishment Caused by Falling Rockwork

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The second side of the Matterhorn Bobsleds attraction at Disneyland is now fully operational after a refurbishment. As you might remember, the ride had to close one side of the attraction as well as pull some odd operational hours to allow for crews to fix a falling piece of rockwork that was the size of a door. A graveyard shift maintenance crew discovered the fallen rockwork. Nobody was injured, and the plaster rockwork did not fall on the coaster track.

Here’s a look at the damaged piece, courtesy of Dusty Sage of MiceChat.

According to Disneyland, the second side of the roller coaster is operational as of today, and hours have returned to normal.

At the Matterhorn Bobsleds, guests climb into a 6-person bobsled and brace against howling winds as they ascend 80 feet up into an icy cave.

Take in the sweeping views at the summit and prepare for a thrilling, high-speed ride. Swoop in and out of shadowy caves and along jagged rocky ledges. Throttle through snowy chutes and around frozen precipices. Fly across bridges and under waterfalls before splashing down into an alpine lake.

The real peril is not snow or sleet! Stories abound of a growling creature known as the Abominable Snowman—who will do anything and everything to protect his home.

2 Different Routes

There are 2 bobsled tracks: 1 on the Fantasyland side of the mountain and the other on the Tomorrowland side. During slower periods, only a single track may be in operation.

More Than Meets the Eye

Matterhorn mountain certainly looks like its counterpart in the Swiss Alps— partially thanks to the excellent use of forced perspective. However, the peak is just a bit lower than the original—it’s exactly 100 times shorter than the 14,700-foot-tall real thing.

More than 800 gallons of paint were used to create heavier snowfall on the north-facing—just like the real Matterhorn. Glass beads on the façade glitter like actual snow!

Making the Mountain

Walt Disney fell in love with the real Matterhorn while filming the 1959 live-action film Third Man on the Mountain

Back at Disneyland Park, Walt decided to cover a forested 20-foot-high mound named Holiday Hill with artificial snow, add a toboggan run and rename it Snow Hill. However, Walt always dreamed big, and the “hill” soon grew into a 147-foot-tall mountain. The attraction opened on June 14, 1959. 

Totally Tubular 

Matterhorn Bobsleds was the first roller-coaster-style attraction at Disneyland Park—and the very first tubular steel coaster in the world. The iconic attraction is also one-of-a-kind—no other Disney park can claim a Matterhorn mountain.

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