The ride "The 5th Dimension" at Chessington was designed/written by Douglas Adams (writer of Hitchhiker's Guide to the galaxy and Dirk Gently). It was a bizarre story based dark ride that led you through some kind of strange sci-fi world. It was replaced by what is now Tomb Blaster.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EXL23EE2F1U[/youtube]
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pSM84F5eFXQ[/youtube]
I've read up a bit on it, anyone remember it?
John Broome who made Alton Towers originally wanted to develop Trentham Gardens in Stoke as a theme park. He installed the Zierer 4-man bob ride at Trentham before it hit Alton Towers in 1985. There were development issues though with poor grounding, so he developed Alton Towers as the primary theme park instead. No idea what would have happened at Alton if he'd been able to develop Trentham
He sold Alton to Tussauds to help fund his redevelopment of Battersea Power Station into a theme park. It quickly ran massively over budget and was halted some time after they removed the roof to take the equipment out. So it's John Broome's fault Battersea Powerstation doesn't have a roof.
Next he sold his house and estate to fund a new leisure facility at Carden in Cheshire. Broome was on the committee for the Manchester 2000 Olympic bid and developed the facility to host some of the Manchester Olympic events. Manchester didn't get the Olympics, so the venture never worked out for him. So he headed back to his roots and invested in Ventureworld.
Ventureworld bought American Adventure off the Granada group, but in 1999 pulled out and sold the park on - it never got renamed Adventure World.
It's incredible, everything he touched turned sour apart from Alton Towers. Trentham was left derelict until about ten years ago, Battersea battered, American Adventure left to waste away and Carden making cash for somebody else eventually.