Kennywood (fictional)

Kennywood is an amusement park located in West Mifflin, Pennsylvania just southeast of Pittsburgh. The park first opened on May 30, 1899, as a trolley park attraction at the end of the Mellon family's Monongahela Street Railway. It was purchased in 1906 by F. W. Henninger and Andrew McSwigan, both of whom later formed the family-owned. Originally the rival to Carwardine Parks, in 1990, Carwardine Parks acquired the original then in 2007, spun off Kennywood into the new incarnation of Kennywood Entertainment Company. The amusement park features various structures and rides dating back to the early 1900s. Along with Rye Playland Park, it is one of only two amusement parks designated as a National Historic Landmark. Kennywood is also one of only thirteen trolley parks in the United States that remain in operation.

Roller coasters

 * Jack Rabbit (1920; wooden coaster)
 * Lil' Phantom (1996; A Molina & Sons kiddie coaster)
 * Phantom's Revenge (1991/2001; A D.H. Morgan hypercoaster, formerly known as "Steel Phantom" [1991-2000], was originally an Arrow hyper looping coaster from 1991-2000, refurbished heavily by Morgan during the 2000-01 offseason which included the inversions being removed)
 * Racer (1927; PTC wooden coaster with a mobius layout)
 * Steel Hornet (2019; A 15 Inversion coaster, broke the record for most inversions in the world)
 * Thunderbolt (1924/1968; A John A. Miller/National Amusement Devices wooden coaster, formerly known as "Pippin" [1924-1967], was given a massive refurbishment for 1968)

Flat rides

 * Aero 360 (2000; A Zamperla Hawk 48 ride with the arrow from the park's logo)
 * Auto Race (1930)
 * Bayern Kurve (1971/2009)
 * Enterprise (1978)
 * Gran Prix (1973; bumper cars)
 * Gold Rusher (1981; A dark ride)
 * Kangaroo (1962)
 * Kenny's Parkway (1996)
 * Merry Go Round (1927)
 * Musik Express (1987)
 * Noah's Ark (1936)
 * Old Mill (1901)
 * Old Kennywood Railroad (1945)
 * Paratrooper (1959)
 * Pitt Fall (1997; An Intamin 2nd generation freefall ride)
 * Pirate (1982)
 * Steel City Skyview (2010; A 300-foot tall Ferris wheel ride)
 * Swing Shot (2006; An S&S Screamin' Swing ride)
 * Turtle (1927)
 * Wave Swinger (1984)
 * The Whip (1919)

Kiddie rides

 * Crazy Trolley (2001)
 * Dizzy Dynamo (1970)
 * Elephant Parade (1987)
 * Kenny's Karousel (1924)
 * Pitt Fall Too (2001; A Zamperla Jumpin' 16 ride)
 * Turtle Chase (1950)
 * Steel City Choppers (1974)
 * Wacky Wheel (1924)
 * Whippersnapper (1985)
 * Whirlwind (1984)

Water rides

 * Jammer 2.0 (2020; A new log flume on the former site of Log Jammer that wasn't occupied by Steel Hornet)
 * Pittsburg Plunge (1995; often misspelled Pittsburgh Plunge on park maps)
 * Raging Rapids (1985; called "Delfino Rapids" from 2003-2006)
 * Volcano Valley (2003; A WhiteWater West RainFortress, formerly called "Corona Mountain" from 2003-2006 and themed after Super Mario Sunshine's final level, renamed in 2006 due to Nintendo wanting to not focus on the GameCube games due to the launch of the Wii)

Former rides

 * Laser Loop (1980-1990; A Schwarzkopf Shuttle Loop coaster, now at La Feria de Chapultepec)

Cancelled The Kennywood Resort Plans
Back in 2001, Jeffery Katzenberg was planning on upgrading the Kennywood park into a resort. Plans were cancelled when he got resigned.

Kennywood Hotel
Replacing the original Back parking lot. Great Wolf Lodge bought this land for a third Pennsylvania location, besides Poconos and Erie.

Kennywaters
Built on land across the street from the now-unrelated Kennywood Mills mall. The planned RainFortress was relocated to the regular park as Volcano Valley. Nowadays, this land is now a strip mall.

Trivia

 * Many people hated the way Carwardine was operating Kennywood and their attempt to modernize the park by nearly disrespecting the park's historical heritage. This lead to many people thought that Carwardine was making Kennywood "too commercial". Christopher R. Carwardine has apologized for what Carwardine did to Kennywood.