The park sits on 56 acres about a mile north of Canandaigua Lake and the former site of Roseland Park, an amusement center that closed in 1985.
The park's Victorian buildings are patterned after some of Canandaigua's historic homes.
BRINGING BACK THE BEAUTY It took nearly two years to restore PTC No. 18 to its original beauty. All the horses had to be stripped of their many coats of paint, then repaired, primed, repainted in their original 1909 colors, and varnished. Every picture had to be professionally cleaned and restored, and new, wide-planked oak flooring had to be made, along with all new brass poles and fixtures. The mechanism that turns the carousel had to be totally rebuilt, including recasting the metal gears, joints and jumping poles. The entire carousel was then rewired with a new, up-to-code electrical system, and its hundreds of lights were replaced. The band organ, which was barely operating, had to be completely taken apart and overhauled. New components had to be created, lost connections had to be found, and the complicated instrument had to be tuned. A new center housing enclosure for the band organ, the center pole and the motor had to be built, and then decorated with mirrors, flowers and gold leaf - and all the work had to be done by hand. It was a painstaking project, but it was worth it. All colors, materials and details in this carousel are faithful to the 1909 original. In all respects, it is an authentic restoration of American folk art of which the community can be very proud. Since 1909, Carousel No. 18 from the Philadelphia Toboggan Company has brought joy and laughter to four generations of families, sweethearts and children. MAY THE CIRCLE BE UNBROKEN.
THE PYRAMID COMPANIES CAROUSEL CENTER OCTOBER 15, 1990 Facts & Figures: Carousel No. 18 has 42 horses, arranged three abreast, in 16 groups. Thirty-eight of the horses are "jumpers" rather than "standers," which means they move up and down instead of being stationary. The outside-row horses are called the carousel's "lead" horses and, because they are the most visible, they are more lavishly decorated than the middle- and inside-row horses. The outside-row lead horses are the biggest horses on the carousel. Carved from solid wood, each one weighs about 225 pounds. Middle-row horses weigh about 150 pounds each. Inside-row horses are the smallest and weigh about 100 pounds each. The center pole of the carousel stands between 25 and 26 feet high, and the entire carousel from the platform up - is suspended from the center pole. The carousel is 54-feet in diameter, and it weighs nearly 30 tons!