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Edenlandia
Edenlandia is the
largest amusement park—or “fun
fair”—in Naples and one of the best-known such attractions in Italy. It
opened in 1965. It is located at the extreme west
end of
the gigantic Overseas Fair Grounds, the Mostra
d’oltremare in the Fuorigrotta suburb of Naples. Those fair
grounds have an interesting history
(see link, above) and were originally a pre-war Fascist undertaking
that underwent
dramatic
post-war subdivision more in keeping with the needs of urban expansion
and,
obviously,
no longer dedicated to the megalomaniacal display of Italy’s African
colonies.
When the park was opened in the 1960s, there was a small road that led
by the
entrance as one drove out from Naples
to Bagnoli. That road is now a major
thoroughfare, viale
Kennedy, and has newer buildings along it for the entire
length.
The
amusement park
is adjacent to the now
(thank God!) defunct premises of a dog-racing
track and to the
renovated
grounds of the Naples Zoo. Apparently, both
Edenlandia and the zoo are
now owned
or sponsored by the same persons or agency since one ticket gets you
into both. Edenlandia—along with the zoo—fell on hard times after the
boom years of the
1970s,
but, as far as I know, Edenlandia—unlike the zoo—always managed to stay
open.
These days, the amusement park seems to be doing well. I have been out
there on
a few weekends and notice that it is very popular and generally
regarded as a
good place to take the kids.
As I recall, I used
Edenlandia at one time to
increase my Italian vocabulary. Such a park is, in fact, called a Luna Park
in Italian—“Moon
Park.” I
don’t know why “moon” or why
they used the English word, “park.” A
Ferris wheel is boringly called a “giant wheel” in Italian (and in some
other
languages) but the “roller coaster” is called The Russian
Mountains in Italian. I do know that one, but I’m
not
going to tell you because they took out
that ride and that was my favorite. Someone has to pay for that
outrage, so it
might as well be you.
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