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Singapore Flyer resumes operations after recent shutdown
by Sanjay Jha | January 26, 2009 at 10:09 pm
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After a one-month shutdown from late December, latest additon of tourist attraction in Singapore, observation wheel called Singapore Flyer has resumed its services on Monday at the start of the New Year.
The world's biggest observation wheel had to shutdown after it developed some technical glitches. 173 passengers were stuck on the world's tallest ferris wheel. The Singapore Flyer, a full 30 meters higher than the well known London Eye, was created more tourist to Singapore.
The world's biggest observation wheel reopened on Monday after a fire trapped passengers for hours and led to a one-month shutdown from late December.
The Singapore Flyer said authorities gave the green light after a German-based firm - TUV SUD - completed testing of new backup systems.
It added that so far, some 5,000 people have taken a ride on the Flyer on Monday.
The majority of the first few passengers who boarded the Singapore Flyer when it re-opened in the morning were tourists.
One tourist said: "My son and daughter are very excited to be in the first capsule today."
Another said: "We are sure that it is perfectly safe to go on, because they have got a reputation to think about."
The reputation was tarnished when 11 people were manually lowered after the Flyer broke down just before Christmas on December 23.
173 visitors were stuck, most of them for over six hours.
But a lot has happened since then.
Foreign experts, together with Singapore companies, were brought in to oversee the installation of new backup systems, which cost some S$3 million.
Florian Bollen, chairman, Singapore Flyer, said: "Everybody wanted the wheel to be running again before Chinese New Year. It is a very important date for us, a turn of luck, and we wanted to run it and that was something everybody believed in and people really came together with team spirit and made it happen."
Despite the new safety measures, there will still be a system to lower people using a harness.
But the management is confident it will never come to that again.
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First Flagged at 10:24 PM, Jan 26, 2009 by weirdchina
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