COSMIC CRATER
Experience a goofy Atom Age future that never was in the dry American desert
TIME: April 12th, 1961
Cosmic Crater is an Atom Age oasis in the harsh badlands of New Mexico. It is an atompunk wonderland, and a testament to the history of space exploration. In under a century, flight has lifted Man off of the ground and now sent Man out into the stars! Cosmic Crater explores that stellar history in a rather tongue-in-cheek manner. The land’s tone borrows heavily from goofy mid-century B-movies. This is a fantastical world of flying saucers and little green men. Some genuine - yet dated - futurism is present as well, channeling the spirit of the original 1955 Tomorrowland through a retro-futuristic lens which will never grow dated.
Cosmic Crater first began suddenly on December 21st, 1960, when a meteor crash landed in the New Mexican desert! Luna Diesel, daughter of William, quickly arrived with a phalanx of S.K.Y. scientists (or “S.K.Y.entists”) to research this impact. A community of astronauts and astronomers quickly grew up around the crater. What they discovered was out of this world! The green-glowing meteorite was composed of a chemical more powerful than uranium. The surrounding deserts were a hotbed of unexplained phenomena and extraterrestrial activity. Most shocking of all, a far larger asteroid loomed in the cosmos above, an asteroid with the potential to destroy all of civilization...and it was headed directly towards Earth!
Cosmic Crater is DisneySky’s smallest land, nestled in between Langley Lagoon and the sun-baked western slopes of Mt. Helios. This is the American Southwest at its most alien, inspired by places like Roswell and Los Alamos and Area 51. Here guests can take part in an expedition into outer space to destroy the deadly asteroid. They can also venture into an airplane graveyard for a spooky, silly close encounter. Or they can simply soak up the atmosphere in an Atom Age lounge or a stylish bomb shelter.
Land Layout & Details
Attractions: 79. IMPACT! (The Asteroid from Outer Space), 80. Atomic Boneyard, 81. Flying Saucers 2.0Dining: 82. Quarks, 83. Bunker Bistro, 84. Guzzlin' Gremlins
Retail: 85. Area 55, 86. Meteorite Mart, 87. Lunar Gifts
The striated archway of Diesel Bay is a perfectly-framed introduction to Cosmic Crater. The entire arid western slope of Mt. Helios looms ahead, covered in a thicket of strangely-shaped red sandstone formations. The conical crater sits at the mountain’s base, surrounded by sci-fi facilities. The nearby foothills are covered in fantastical cactus forests - all Joshua trees and agaves and barrel cacti, verdant and overgrown like an arboretum desert garden. Forced-perspective satellite dishes (modeled after New Mexico’s VLA) stand flanked like soldiers along the mountainous ridgelines, silently monitoring the skies.
The land music for Cosmic Crater leans heavily into the 1950s B-movie style. There is a strong emphasis on the Theremin, on haunted guitar, and on extremely early electronic music like Pierre Henry’s Psyche Rock. This sci-fi soundtrack sampling provides a decent idea of the land’s musical ambiance.
A two-lane black tar highway leads past a forgotten town towards the crater. To the left, Quarks blocks views of urban Avengers Airspace across the Lagoon. Quarks is a trippy, retro table service restaurant which resurrects Imagineering’s now-defunct Encounter restaurant. To the right, nearby boulders feature Native American petroglyphs. Depicted in these carvings we see a traditional rain dance - a weather reference, to continue the sky theme - plus drawings of early UFO visitations which imply a long history of the bizarre in this area.
Past bullethole-ridden radioactivity signs half-buried under small sand dunes, past Area 51-style “Warning” signage, eerie canyons lead into an airplane graveyard. This is the site of Atomic Boneyard, an original trackless dark ride which is more or less an alien version of Haunted Mansion. Next door is Area 55, a chintzy tourist trap shop built from an abandoned gas station trying to capitalize on alien mania. New Mexican ristras (hanging garlands of dried red chile peppers) line the nearby fences.
Past a spherical rocket fuel storage container, the pathway splits into two. To the right, Vasquez Rock formations give way to a closeup view of the crater. Rocketships splash down in a bay at the crater’s base, beckoning guests to enter the monumental cavity through a large corrugated metal storm drain tunnel.
The paved highway wends left around the crater’s perimeter, where ponytail palms and cercidium floridum trees provide welcome shade and block views of Avengers Airspace. More visual obstructions come courtesy of a vintage U.S. military jeep, and rock formations inspired by Nevada’s Valley of Fire. The cracked, dried lakeshore resembles a salt flat. A steel Googie bridge crosses the splashdown bay, to a sandy isthmus. Here is the Guzzlin’ Gremlins drink stand, set within a decommissioned fuselage, and the Lunar Gifts merchandise wagon. The pavement gives way to a cracked dry riverbed walkway. Another Googie bridge to the left, this one with overly-thick steel cross beams inspired by When Worlds Collide, spans Langley Lagoon and leads guests to Avengers Airspace - specifically to the starboard wing of the land’s massive Helicarrier. Since every land transition is marked by an arched gateway of some sort, guests pass under a Googie octopod inspired by LAX’s Theme Building. Continuing along the seco riverbed leads to another crater entrance, this one through a series of hollow cargo containers.
Every crater entrance leads to a circular plaza. Dry, sandy crater walls surround it in all directions. Pockmarked mini-craters dot the desert floors. At the depression’s center is the green-glowing meteorite which created the caldera. This steaming space rock sits on display atop a raised platform akin to the Tomorrowland 1955 World Clock, and this platform in turn sits atop the sunken Meteorite Mart post-ride shop. Manmade stones surround the circular shop on all sides, depicting the phases of the moon. A rocketry facility along the crater’s outer berm leads to the E-ticket roller coaster IMPACT! (The Asteroid from Outer Space), where guests rocket into outer space and confront a doomsday asteroid. Hemispherical domes on the other side house Flying Saucers 2.0, which fuses a teacups flat ride with an interactive shooter ride.
One final buried tunnel leads north through the crater walls. This passageway features an inverse arc rooftop shaped like Calatrava’s Dulles terminal building, holding back the lunar rocks. Mid-century S.K.Y. posters line the tunnel interior, depicting fanciful dreams of spaceflight. Beyond the crater is one more Googie bridge and a sandy courtyard bearing the S.K.Y. seal - which resembles a rejected period NASA logo. From these vantage points, guests enjoy spectacular views of IMPACT’s initial launch: flames shoot out from beneath the coaster tracks as rocketship trains propel up the slopes of Mt. Helios and out-of-sight in a jaw-dropping simulated space launch.
Views of Avengers Airspace across the waterways are again obscured, this time by eerie tufa pillars. These bizarre volcanic limestone formations pepper Langley Lagoon like the shores of Mono Lake, mixed in with other equally-alien visuals like saguaro cacti or weather balloons. Lake Havasu-style rocks also block views; as seen from the Avengers Airspace side, desert rock views are blocked by Battery Park elements like hedgerows and concrete water walls.
Opposite this and carved into Mt. Helios’ sandstone cliffs stands Bunker Bistro. This major counter service restaurant offers additional views of IMPACT’s launch from within an enclosed bomb shelter. Above this edifice is a big air raid siren perched high atop a metal tower. On display in the nearby slopes is a Coleoptere, quite possibly the strangest-looking aircraft ever devised!
Final passageway to Runway One’s Mercury Circle is through an open air tunnel stylized like a Googie car wash roof. A portion of this rooftop is buried underneath a fresh rockslide from Mt. Helios. The slide even spills out into the S.K.Y. courtyard, with “temporary” barriers hastily erected around the boulders.
The land music for Cosmic Crater leans heavily into the 1950s B-movie style. There is a strong emphasis on the Theremin, on haunted guitar, and on extremely early electronic music like Pierre Henry’s Psyche Rock. This sci-fi soundtrack sampling provides a decent idea of the land’s musical ambiance.
A two-lane black tar highway leads past a forgotten town towards the crater. To the left, Quarks blocks views of urban Avengers Airspace across the Lagoon. Quarks is a trippy, retro table service restaurant which resurrects Imagineering’s now-defunct Encounter restaurant. To the right, nearby boulders feature Native American petroglyphs. Depicted in these carvings we see a traditional rain dance - a weather reference, to continue the sky theme - plus drawings of early UFO visitations which imply a long history of the bizarre in this area.
Past bullethole-ridden radioactivity signs half-buried under small sand dunes, past Area 51-style “Warning” signage, eerie canyons lead into an airplane graveyard. This is the site of Atomic Boneyard, an original trackless dark ride which is more or less an alien version of Haunted Mansion. Next door is Area 55, a chintzy tourist trap shop built from an abandoned gas station trying to capitalize on alien mania. New Mexican ristras (hanging garlands of dried red chile peppers) line the nearby fences.
Past a spherical rocket fuel storage container, the pathway splits into two. To the right, Vasquez Rock formations give way to a closeup view of the crater. Rocketships splash down in a bay at the crater’s base, beckoning guests to enter the monumental cavity through a large corrugated metal storm drain tunnel.
The paved highway wends left around the crater’s perimeter, where ponytail palms and cercidium floridum trees provide welcome shade and block views of Avengers Airspace. More visual obstructions come courtesy of a vintage U.S. military jeep, and rock formations inspired by Nevada’s Valley of Fire. The cracked, dried lakeshore resembles a salt flat. A steel Googie bridge crosses the splashdown bay, to a sandy isthmus. Here is the Guzzlin’ Gremlins drink stand, set within a decommissioned fuselage, and the Lunar Gifts merchandise wagon. The pavement gives way to a cracked dry riverbed walkway. Another Googie bridge to the left, this one with overly-thick steel cross beams inspired by When Worlds Collide, spans Langley Lagoon and leads guests to Avengers Airspace - specifically to the starboard wing of the land’s massive Helicarrier. Since every land transition is marked by an arched gateway of some sort, guests pass under a Googie octopod inspired by LAX’s Theme Building. Continuing along the seco riverbed leads to another crater entrance, this one through a series of hollow cargo containers.
Every crater entrance leads to a circular plaza. Dry, sandy crater walls surround it in all directions. Pockmarked mini-craters dot the desert floors. At the depression’s center is the green-glowing meteorite which created the caldera. This steaming space rock sits on display atop a raised platform akin to the Tomorrowland 1955 World Clock, and this platform in turn sits atop the sunken Meteorite Mart post-ride shop. Manmade stones surround the circular shop on all sides, depicting the phases of the moon. A rocketry facility along the crater’s outer berm leads to the E-ticket roller coaster IMPACT! (The Asteroid from Outer Space), where guests rocket into outer space and confront a doomsday asteroid. Hemispherical domes on the other side house Flying Saucers 2.0, which fuses a teacups flat ride with an interactive shooter ride.
One final buried tunnel leads north through the crater walls. This passageway features an inverse arc rooftop shaped like Calatrava’s Dulles terminal building, holding back the lunar rocks. Mid-century S.K.Y. posters line the tunnel interior, depicting fanciful dreams of spaceflight. Beyond the crater is one more Googie bridge and a sandy courtyard bearing the S.K.Y. seal - which resembles a rejected period NASA logo. From these vantage points, guests enjoy spectacular views of IMPACT’s initial launch: flames shoot out from beneath the coaster tracks as rocketship trains propel up the slopes of Mt. Helios and out-of-sight in a jaw-dropping simulated space launch.
Views of Avengers Airspace across the waterways are again obscured, this time by eerie tufa pillars. These bizarre volcanic limestone formations pepper Langley Lagoon like the shores of Mono Lake, mixed in with other equally-alien visuals like saguaro cacti or weather balloons. Lake Havasu-style rocks also block views; as seen from the Avengers Airspace side, desert rock views are blocked by Battery Park elements like hedgerows and concrete water walls.
Opposite this and carved into Mt. Helios’ sandstone cliffs stands Bunker Bistro. This major counter service restaurant offers additional views of IMPACT’s launch from within an enclosed bomb shelter. Above this edifice is a big air raid siren perched high atop a metal tower. On display in the nearby slopes is a Coleoptere, quite possibly the strangest-looking aircraft ever devised!
Final passageway to Runway One’s Mercury Circle is through an open air tunnel stylized like a Googie car wash roof. A portion of this rooftop is buried underneath a fresh rockslide from Mt. Helios. The slide even spills out into the S.K.Y. courtyard, with “temporary” barriers hastily erected around the boulders.
Cast member outfits
Cast members portray members of S.K.Y.’s scientific research team, clad in NASA-style jumpsuits complete with the S.K.Y. seal. Other cast members (particularly those working Atomic Boneyard) dress as ‘50s-era U.S. soldiers.
Streetmosphere
Out on the highway near Area 55, a live musician plays the Theremin. This amazing musical instrument is played without touch, creating that iconic sci-fi “whoo-oo-oo” noise.
Out on the highway near Area 55, a live musician plays the Theremin. This amazing musical instrument is played without touch, creating that iconic sci-fi “whoo-oo-oo” noise.
Walkaround characters
There are no official IP tie-ins found in Cosmic Crater. Instead, a “Living Character Initiative” Mars rover robot roams about freely, interacting with guests.
There are no official IP tie-ins found in Cosmic Crater. Instead, a “Living Character Initiative” Mars rover robot roams about freely, interacting with guests.
Restrooms
Restrooms are carved into the Vasquez Rocks formations near Area 55. These facilities are a replica of Crane’s “Bathroom of Tomorrow” once found in Disneyland’s 1955 opening day Tomorrowland.
Churro carts
Cast members serve churros from Googie-esque rocket fuel carts, which are heavily styled to resemble ‘50s icon Robbie the Robot. Churros come filled with raspberry and coated in Pop Rocks.
Cast members serve churros from Googie-esque rocket fuel carts, which are heavily styled to resemble ‘50s icon Robbie the Robot. Churros come filled with raspberry and coated in Pop Rocks.
Drinking fountains
Fountains shaped like UFOs sit on the ends of Googie poles.
Fountains shaped like UFOs sit on the ends of Googie poles.
Trash cans
Trash cans are plain, egg-shaped Space Age bins.
Trash cans are plain, egg-shaped Space Age bins.
Benches
Benches are equally simple and streamlined: cantilevered stainless steel designs that are equal parts Googie and Charles & Ray Eames.
Benches are equally simple and streamlined: cantilevered stainless steel designs that are equal parts Googie and Charles & Ray Eames.
Umbrellas
Monochrome, colorful tarps in an Atom Age style.
Monochrome, colorful tarps in an Atom Age style.
Fencing
Sleek simplicity is the game with fencing as well, which unobtrusively continues our Googie design trend.
Sleek simplicity is the game with fencing as well, which unobtrusively continues our Googie design trend.
Lighting
Similar to the various Tomorrowlands, Cosmic Crater’s nighttime lighting package really brings the land to life with a shifting, otherworldly, psychedelic color scheme. There are many possible light sources, such as street poles which resemble lava lamps, or whirling lights shaped like the atomic symbol, or simple recessed neon lighting.
Misters
Steam escapes from small craters all along the perimeter of the main caldera.
Steam escapes from small craters all along the perimeter of the main caldera.
Stroller corrals & phone-charging stations
The abandoned Atomoco gas station which houses Atomic Boneyard’s FastPass machine also houses charging stations. These stations are formed from era-appropriate coffee vending machines, which promise “Energy Recharges!”
The abandoned Atomoco gas station which houses Atomic Boneyard’s FastPass machine also houses charging stations. These stations are formed from era-appropriate coffee vending machines, which promise “Energy Recharges!”
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