The Niagara Tower of Power
The center of the northeast side of The Pike is dominated by the Niagara Tower of Power, a 389-foot tall recreation of the Electric Tower, the centerpiece of the Pan-American Exposition of 1901 held in Buffalo, New York and the tallest structure in Americana 1900.
A magnificent waterfall, inspired by the world-famous Niagara Falls, gushes from an arch near the Tower’s base into a churning pool at the base of the tower. This waterfall is flanked by entranceways leading visitors into the Niagara Visitors Center, a collection of thrill rides, family attractions, shops and dining that gives them just a taste of the fun and excitement to be found in the Niagara region of New York and Ontario. Niagara U.S.A., Niagara Falls Canada and Americana 1900 have come together to bring a taste of one of North America's first tourist destinations to The Pike in this comprehensive complex of attractions.
This is a short YouTube video that shows the original Electric Tower and the waterfall at the Pan-American Exposition. It is mislabeled since it was not taken from a balloon, but it shows what the Niagara Tower of Power and the waterfall that pours from the front of the tower actually looks like.
The Niagara Tower of Power contains two attractions in the tower itself: the Observation deck at the 252-foot level, and The Niagara Electric L&P Tower, a 310ft interior combination “Space Shot” and “Turbo Drop” towers.
The Tower of Power Observation Deck
The observation deck is reached by two elevators, each capable of carrying thirty people. Visitors can stroll around this open-air observation deck and observe all of Americana 1900 and the surrounding countryside for miles. Signage explains to visitors what they are seeing, especially landmarks miles away from the park, but the view of Americana 1900 itself reveals sights that only guests who ride the tallest attractions in the park can witness and enjoy- the gigantic image of a Hershey Chocolate Bar on the roof of the Hershey's World of Chocolate building, the decorative floral patterns in the Sunken Gardens at the base of the Niagara Tower of Power, the recreation of the first box of Kellogg's Corn Flakes painted on the roof of the Kellogg's of Battle Creek complex, and most impressively, the entire beauty of the Americana 1900 landscape.
The Niagara Electric L&P Tower (AAP)
The Niagara Electric L&P Tower (the L&P “officially” stands for “Light and Power,” but actually refers to “launch” and “plummet”) is a four-towered combination of an S&S Space Shot and Turbo Drop, totally enclosed inside the Tower of Power. Each of the four ride towers has a freefall carriage that can accommodate sixteen riders, four on each side of the ride tower. Two of the towers launch their riders up 310 feet, while the other two start their ride by carrying the riders to the same 310 feet height, then propelling them downwards. Riders choose which tower to ride, then take their seats at the bottom of the tower. The Light and Power Towers pass through the center of the observation deck at the 252ft level, but are partitioned off from view. Each tower carries its riders on a random combination of launches and plummets, and all are done in complete darkness. The Light Tower (the Space Shot, or “launch” side) and the Power Tower (the Turbo Drop, or “plummet” side) each have a unique storyline.
For clarity, imagine this (the Power Tower at Cedar Point) inside the Tower of Power:
Riders choosing the Light Tower (after being secured in their seats by “employees of Niagara Electric L&P”,) are raised up thirty feet into the darkness of the Tower of Power- and there they wait.
“Hey, Sam!” a voice in the darkness says, suddenly enough to hopefully startle riders not expecting it.
“Yea, what is it, Ralph?” another voice says.
“We got a repair crew here to fix that broken fuse box up on top of the Tower. They’re already in the man lift. Go ahead and send them up.”
“How am I supposed to do that?”
“Push the button.”
“What button?”
“The button on the control panel, stupid!”
“Hey, it’s dark in here. I can’t see the control panel anywhere.”
“Of course it’s dark in here. The fuse box is broken. That’s what they’re gonna fix.”
“So how am I supposed to see the button on the control panel?”
“It’s right in front of you. What? Are you new here?
“Yea, as a matter of fact, I am! I usually work over in the Crypt of Fire. They sent me over here because the guy who usually runs this thing called off sick today.”
“You work in the Crypt of Fire? I hear that place is really scary!”
“Yeah, but at least they got lights. Not like this place. I can’t see anything! How am I supposed to know which button to push?”
“Just reach out and feel for the control panel.”
“Ok, I think I found it.”
“Did you find the button to push?
“Yea, I think so.”
“So push the button. These people are getting impatient!”
(He apparently pushes the button, and the riders suddenly drop about ten feet straight down)
“Not that button!” Sam hollers. “The other one! The one next to it!”
“Oops. Sorry. OK, I think I found it.” The riders hear a “click, click, click. “It’s stuck.”
“Whadayamean, it’s stuck?”
“I mean, it’s stuck! All it does is go click, click…”
...and the tower launches the riders straight up, launching them into the darkness at fifty m.p.h. They shoot upward past the observation deck, finally stopping at the height of 300ft above the base of the tower, then immediately begin to free-fall back down. After a few controlled bounces in the pitch blackness of the inside of the tower, they slowly settle back towards the bottom. As they near the ground, they hear Ralph saying to them,
“Sorry about that, folks! Sam told me to push the wrong button.”
“I DID NOT!” they hear Sam loudly protest.
“Anyway, when I get done here I’m headin’ over to the Crypt of Fire. When you get over there, tell ‘em Ralph sent you!”
After being released from their ride restraints, riders have three choices- get back in line and ride the Light Tower again, decide to explore the rest of the Tower of Power complex, or ride the Power Tower.
The Power Tower, the plummet/Turbo Drop side of the Tower of Power, is a much darker ride experience in tone than its launch counterpart. The ride seating is identical to the Light Tower, and the loading process is the same, but there the similarity ends. When loaded and secured, the seats carrying the riders begin to slowly but steadily ascend. After climbing about thirty feet up into the inky blackness of the Tower’s unlit interior, a voice is heard, a voice coming from speakers near the riders’ heads. It is somber, serious, almost a warning to the riders.
“Some say that the Tower of Power is haunted by the ghost of a worker who plummeted down the elevator shaft when a cable broke. Some say it was simply too complicated a structure for the technology of the era. Most people who worked here never noticed anything out of the ordinary as they rode the elevators during their busy day, up and down over three hundred feet to their offices in the Tower, or to enjoy the observation deck far above the town. But today, be it a problem with the technology of the time or a ghost trapped in his world between the Here and the Hereafter just longing for some company, something will go wrong.”
The riders continue their ascent into the Tower’s thick, almost oppressive darkness - and then, when they reach the 300-foot level, they stop. There is silence, a silence that seems to drag on for hours. Then a sound is heard, a sound that resembles a hacksaw cutting through something metallic. A different voice is heard, a voice that speaks in a heartbreakingly sad tone.
“Lonely...I’m so lonely...I need company...so lonely…”
The seat holding the riders suddenly begins to jerk, first downwards just a few inches, then back up, then down further, then upward again. The jerking stops, and the voice speaks again, but this time it isn’t sad or mourningful, but vicious and angry!
“YOU WILL JOIN ME FOR ALL ETERNITY!!!!!”
The ride carriage is forced downwards at 1.5G, plunging through the pitch blackness with nothing but tiny tracer lights racing upwards at a speed faster than the riders to give those riders any concept of their velocity. As they approach the bottom, brakes suddenly slow the riders, and as in the Light Tower a series of controlled bounces soon bring them to a gradual landing.
Niagara Visitors Center
The building at the base of the Niagara Tower of Power, inspired by the architecture of the Pan American Exposition of 1901, contains several gift shops, guest services including restrooms, a tourist information center for the Niagara region, a restaurant (to be discussed later), and an attraction that brings visitors to the very creation of Niagara Falls- Niagara's Fury, a combination introductory film and 4-D multimedia experience.
The eight minute preshow film features Chip the Beaver and his friends in an animated short film that explains the formation of the Falls during the Ice Age. After viewing this film, visitors wearing protective rain gear enter a circular theater, and while standing on a huge circular platform they will experience the actual creation of Niagara Falls, the power of the glaciers that formed the region and the continuing effect that the power of the Niagara River has on the ongoing evolution of the Falls. This multimedia event uses motion, sound, water and cutting-edge cinematic effects to carry visitors into the center of "Niagara's Fury". Rewritten and refilmed for the Niagara Visitors Center at Americana 1900, it is an attraction not to be missed.
Niagara-on-the-Lake Juice Bar
The Niagara-on-the-Lake Chamber of Commerce sponsors this juice and snack bar to introduce the world to the amazing bounty of fruits and other healthy foodstuffs grown on the Niagara Peninsula of Ontario, just a short drive from the famous falls. Eighty percent of Canada’s peach harvest comes from this region, but cherries, apples, plums, nectarines and grapes also are abundant, and this Juice Bar offers for sale pure, cold juices “on tap” to thirsty visitors, along with specially-blended fruit drinks and freshly-baked pastries featuring the products grown in the rich soil and temperate climate on the shores of Lake Ontario.
Buffalo Wild Wings, a full-service restaurant known throughout the world for its wings, sandwiches and more, is located on the second floor. It will be discussed in the “Dining” section of The Pike’s presentation.