
Explore Ashvegas
Tags
art (65)
Asheville (2725)
Asheville Citizen-Times (82)
Asheville City Council (202)
Asheville Police Department (102)
bar (63)
beer (279)
Biltmore Estate (61)
Black Mountain (73)
brewery (153)
coffee (60)
comedy (84)
craft beer (330)
crime (66)
Curate (60)
downtown (163)
Esther Manheimer (68)
featured (1728)
film (114)
food (264)
French Broad River (64)
Grey Eagle (108)
grocery store (63)
Haywood Road (177)
Highland Brewing (62)
hotel (114)
Lexington Avenue (78)
Merrimon Avenue (74)
Moogfest (59)
movie (91)
movie review (278)
music (142)
New Belgium Brewing (80)
newspaper (60)
Patton Avenue (59)
photography (68)
restaurant (242)
River Arts District (167)
south slope (127)
Stu Helm (292)
The Mothlight (62)
The Orange Peel (113)
The Week in Film (85)
UNC Asheville (70)
West Asheville (292)
I say let it go. Apparently it was a pretty popular place when it first opened, and even into the early 90s. My parents used to go there when they were younger (not long after it first opened) and I think just about everyone in my extended family has got photos of themselves at Ghost Town. I went one time after it reopened in 2007, and while it was a somewhat interesting place, there really wasn’t that much there. Certainly not enough to do or see to warrant the steep ticket prices.
The roller coaster, which was not running when I went, later ran for something like one day before it got shut down again. The rides were the exact same rides that you see at the Mountain State Fair every year. The food and gift shops, like all amusement parks, were way overpriced. The most interesting things, really, were the staged gun fights and the can-can dancers, and those weren’t even all that interesting. Actually, I would say the best thing about the whole park was the chair-lift that takes you there. It’s all downhill after that (literally and figuratively). Ghost Town had its time, but I think its time has passed.