Mission to Mars is now a restaurant in Disney's Tomorrowland.Disney/Flickr - Since first opening in 1955, Disneyland has undergone many changes.
- Several park rides, including Mission to Mars and the People Mover, are now extinct.
- We've gathered photos of nine attractions people might not have known once operated in the California theme park.
Over 60 years ago, Disneyland opened in Anaheim, California. In the decades since, Walt Disney's original theme park vision has undergone changes both big and small. Rides, attractions, and entire swaths of land have sometimes been overhauled or torn down to make way for modern amusements.
But thanks to documentaries and numerous Disney bloggers, we can still look back at some of the most iconic rides that are now only a memory.
Keep reading for a look at nine extinct Disneyland attractions you probably never knew about.
The Flying Saucers ride was only open for five years.
The Flying Saucers were built in the spot where Space Mountain is now.
Disney
The Flying Saucers ride was basically like a giant air hockey board, but with bumper car "saucers." Air from the circles on the ride's floor would push up the saucers, creating a floating effect.
Thanks to the official Disney Parks blog, you can watch the Flying Saucers in action on the ride's opening day in 1961.
The Rocket Jets ride was a Tomorrowland landmark from the '60s through the late '90s.
The old Rocket Jets ride replaced the Astro-Jets, and now Disneyland as the Astro Orbitor instead.
Gene Spesard/Flickr
Rocket Jets was actually a replacement for a similar ride called Astro-Jets, but we've included it here because it had a much longer tenure. Rocket Jets was a spinning attraction similar to the well-known Dumbo ride.
After it closed in 1997, Disneyland built a new rotating rocket ride called the Astro Orbitor. But the replacement was too heavy to build in the exact same spot as the Rocket Jets, so it was moved to the entrance of Tomorrowland on the ground level.
The PeopleMover is one of Disneyland's most-missed extinct attractions.
The PeopleMovier is still in Disney World, but not Disneyland.
Gene Spesard/Wikimedia Commons
Many who visited Disneyland in its earlier years will remember the PeopleMover — a train ride that ran along an elevated track. First built in 1961, the ride was a great way to relax and enjoy a unique view of Tomorrowland. Though a version of this ride still exists in Disney World, the original California park version was retired in 1995.
For a full look at the ride's history, watch David Oneal's mini-documentary.
Here's another look at the PeopleMover back in its Tomorrowland heyday.
The PeopleMover was a fan favorite.
Gene Spesard/Flickr
The boarding station for the PeopleMover was right below the Rocket Jets ride.
Disneyland replaced the popular PeopleMover with a ride called Rocket Rods.
The Rocket Rods were short-lived.
Wikipedia
Not to be confused to the extinct ride we just looked at (Rocket Jets), the Rocket Rods ride was a high-speed thrill ride that used the old PeopleMover track to jet parkgoers around Tomorrowland. Think of it like a rollercoaster but with no loops or major ups and downs. Rocket Rods was only open for two years, from 1998 to 2000.
Now the PeopleMover and Rocket Rods track sits unused above Tomorrowland, with no plans to install a new attraction in their place.
Similar to the PeopleMover, the Skyway was a memorable Disneyland ride that closed in the '90s.
The Skyway used to go through Matterhorn Mountain.
Gene Spesard/Flickr
The Skyway opened in 1956. It was a gondola ride that transported people from Tomorrowland to Fantasyland and back. The colorful buckets were suspended from cables swinging high above the pedestrian paths.
The Skyway cables went right through the middle of the Matterhorn Bobsled ride.
A look at the Skyway cables going into Matterhorn.
Gene Spesard/Flickr
The Submarine Voyage ride was open for 40 years before it closed in 1998.
One of the most scenic areas of Disneyland was always the blue lagoon which held the Submarine Voyage ride.
Thomas Duff/Flickr
For the Submarine Voyage, guests entered the submarine at a docking station, and then looked out of circular windows as the sub made its way around a track.
The Submarine Voyage was closed in 1998 after surveys indicated that parkgoers wanted something "more exciting," according to the Los Angeles Times.
Here's a rare look at the lagoon in 2003 during construction:
The lagoon without water.
Phu Son/Flickr
Though the Submarine Voyage closed in 1998, it was five years before Disney decided how to replace it. They found a solution in the 2003 Pixar hit "Finding Nemo."
The "Finding Nemo" version of Submarine Voyage opened in 2007.
This is one of the newer rides inside Disneyland park.
Associated Press
Though the general set up was exactly the same, the updated version of Submarine Voyage incorporated new technology that makes the ride more engaging. Digital renderings of Nemo, Dory, Marlin and friends can be seen through the windows of the submarine as they go on an underwater adventure.
Midget Autopia was a miniature version of the classic Autopia car ride.
A look at the old car ride for children.
Mickey Mouse Parks/YouTube
Honey, I Shrunk the Audience! was a 3D theater adventure.
The theater is right in front of Space Mountain.
Loren Javier/Flickr
Based on the movie "Honey, I Shrunk the Kids," this attraction was a popular addition to Disneyland. It replaced "Captain EO" — a 3D sci-fi movie starring Michael Jackson that had been shown in the theater from 1986 until 1998.
For Honey I Shrunk the Audience, guests donned "safety goggles" (a.k.a. 3D glasses) in order to watch an award ceremony. But a series of goofs leads to the theater and audience being temporarily "shrunk."
The 3D experience was open until 2010, and then the theater went back to showing "Captain EO" after Michael Jackson's death as a tribute to the dead pop star. But "Captain EO" was discontinued in 2014, and now the theater sits unused.
Mission to Mars was a space-inspired thrill ride.
A look at the old Mission to Mars facade in Disneyland.
Disney
Originally called Rocket to the Moon, Mission to Mars was rebranded in 1975 — six years after NASA successfully put a man on the moon.
Tomorrowland needed to update its vision, and so a Mars mission ride was born. Visitors sat in a circular room (meant to replicate the inside of a space ship) and a projected video on the ceiling mimicked space flight.
Mission to Mars was closed in 1992 as Disneyland planned to revamp Tomorrowland once again.
Pizza Port in the 2000s
Jeremy Thompson/Flickr
But instead of a new ride, Disneyland parkgoers received a new restaurant. Redd Rockett's Pizza Port reused the building (and the rocket design from Rocket to the Moon) as decor.
Now people the restuarant has been revamped again with a "Toy Story" alien theme.