Tokyo Carwardine Colony

Located in, and opened in 1995.

History
By the summer season of 1994, there were several construction issues and delays, to help alleviate the issues, the manufacturers had to bring more junior employees to work on the project, when it was originally intended to only have their senior employees, most notably, Arrow brought in Alan Schilke to work on finishing the park's version of Carwardine Mines, becoming the first coaster he personally had a hand in.

The park officially opened on April 29th, 1995, coinciding with Hirohito's birthday and the start of Golden Week in Japan. Even with the construction delays, dedicated workers helped the park open on time.

In early 1998, five rides formerly from the original Opryland arrived at the park. Over the next half decade, four of the five would be built, while one of them (Skyride) was left in storage and later scrapped.

In 2005, Expression of Misteri was added for their 10th anniversary.

Areas

 * マインシャフト (Mineshaft)
 * コニーアイランド (Coney Island)
 * タイムマシン (Time Machine)
 * 任天堂プラザ (Nintendo Plaza)
 * コーストパーク (Coast Park)

Roller coasters

 * Carwardine Mines (1995; An Arrow Dynamics mine train roller coaster, mirror of the location at Carwardine Colony, but unlike the one at Carwardine Colony, this one still has the original turn that, at Carwardine Colony, was curtailed and shortened) [Mineshaft]
 * Expression of Misteri (2005; A Cyclone Unlimited wooden coaster) [Mineshaft]
 * Nagano Bobsleighs (1997; An Intamin Custom-layout Swiss Bob roller coaster, relocated from Desertworld) [Coney Island]

Flat rides

 * Big Bad Octopus (1996; An Eyerly Polyp relocated from Blackpool Pleasure Beach) [Coney Island]
 * Carousel (1995; A 50-Foot 4-Abreast Huss-TechEruo Carousel; currently has the exact same soundtrack as its US counterpart) [Coney Island]
 * Circuit Raceway (2001; A slot car ride using parts from Lagoon's former Speedway Sr.) [Coney Island]
 * Dodgem (2002; A bumper car ride relocated from the original Opryland) [Coney Island]
 * Fear Drop (2009; An Intamin Gyro Drop ride) [Coney Island]
 * Flick Flack (2003; A HUSS Flic Flac moved from Yokohama Dreamland) [Coney Island]
 * Fuji Spin (2004; A Mack Matterhorn moved from Miracle Strip) [Coney Island]
 * Kigyo (2006; A HUSS Enterprise moved from Thorpe Park) [Time Machine]
 * Magic Carpet (2023; A Zierer Flying Carpet moved from Busch Gardens Williamsburg, where it previously operated as Da Vinci's Cradle) [Time Machine]
 * Mario no Wing Flyer (2000; A Sky Fun 1 Skycoaster moved from the original Opryland) [Nintendo Plaza]
 * Sawmill (1999; An Arrow Log Flume relocated from the original Opryland) [Mineshaft]
 * Tea Cups (2008; A Meisho Teacups moved from Seibuen Yuenchi) [Coney Island]
 * Wave Swinger (1998; A Zierer Wave Swinger relocated from the original Opryland) [Coney Island]

Flat rides

 * Kirby's Spinning Spiral (1995-2019; an Intamin Flight Trainer that outlived all it's other parks' counterparts and became the last one in the Carwardine chain in 2001 and the second-to-last one in the world in 2007, before it was demolished in 2019) [Nintendo Plaza]

Restaurants

 * Dippin’ Dots (multiple stands throughout park)
 * McDonald's (Time Machine)
 * Mister Donut (Coney Island)

Trivia

 * During the 2000s, PBS Kids characters appeared at Tokyo Carwardine Colony as part of a promotion for the PBS Kids block on the short-lived PBS pay TV channel in Japan.

Map
https://www.scribblemaps.com/create/#/id=Gp3nLbLh_Y&lat=35.72045513&lng=139.27461573&z=17&t=hybrid