SkyStar Wheel is a 150-foot tall (45.7 m) 137-foot (41.8 m) diameter traveling observation wheel.[1][2][3][4] It is 500-foot tall (152.4 m) in circumference and includes over one million colored LED lights.[1]
The wheel has a total of 36 climate-controlled gondolas.[1][3] There are 35 handicap accessible general admission gondolas which holds up to six guests.[1] As well as one non-handicap accessible VIP gondola with leather seats and hardwood floors which holds up to five guests.[1] An average ride lasts for twelve minutes.[1]
The observation wheel is owned and operated by SkyView Partners, a company based in St. Louis, Missouri.[2]
History
The ride first opened on March 29, 2018 in Louisville, Kentucky's Waterfront Park for the 2018 Kentucky Derby, Thunder Over Louisville, and Waterfront Wednesday season opener.[3] It remained open until May 6, 2018.[3] The base rent paid by the operator to the park was US$25,000 or 5% of gross profits, whichever was greater.[3]
It moved to the Waterside District in downtown Norfolk, Virginia and opened on May 19, 2018 where it operated until August 19, 2018.[5][6]
The wheel was scheduled to open at the Banks alongside the Ohio River in Cincinnati, Ohio on August 31, 2018, but was delayed until September 1, 2018 due to weather.[7] It opened to help celebrate the Banks' ten-year anniversary and was located across from the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center.[7] The wheel remained open at this location until March 1, 2020.[8][9][10] On July 2, 2019, it was announced that the owners planned to return to the area and install a permanent 180-foot tall (54.9 m) observation wheel set to open by March 5, 2021.[11][12] However, the company indicated in December 2020 they had put the plans on hold due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[8][12]
The wheel arrived at the Music Concourse within San Francisco's Golden Gate Park on March 15, 2020 and completed assembly on March 21 as an attraction to celebrate the park's 150th anniversary.[2][13] While that celebration was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the observation wheel opened on October 21, 2020 under a one-year contract.[2][14] The contract was later extended an additional year to help the operator recoup their lost costs from the pandemic.[2] It closed on October 22, 2023 to relocate to nearby Fisherman's Wharf in time for the 2023 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit.[2]
Since November 13, 2023, it has been operating in San Francisco's Fisherman's Wharf.[2][4]