Dallas Zoo Reopens Monorail

A monorail plagued by electrical issues at the Dallas Zoo will reopen Friday.

The zoo closed the train in 2014 to complete $3 million in renovations to the cars, which were 25 years old.

โ€œWe have gotten questions about this for every day since we've closed it for renovations,โ€ said zoo spokeswoman, Laurie Holloway.

The ride became of growing concern after three incidents from 2011-2014.

On each occasion, the monorail abruptly shut down with passengers on board, requiring dozens to be rescued from the cars.  

โ€œThose were all power surges that were offsite,โ€ Holloway explained. โ€œThey weren't even on our grounds.โ€

To remedy the issue, the zoo removed a fail-safe mechanism that caused the train to turn off during a power surge. They have instead installed a new safety measure that will allow the cars to still operate without electricity.

โ€œWe have a tug now. It's a separate engine, a diesel motor,โ€ said Holloway. โ€œShould something happen with Oncor again or power surge, we can just go run that on the track and push the train to the station.โ€

The cars are also now equipped with air conditioning, which will be run through an auxiliary system if a surge knocks out power. Currently, only one train comes with air conditioning; however, the remaining two trains will be equipped with it by summer.

โ€œThey've tested it under load and all different conditions, and it's gotten through all of its checklists,โ€ Holloway said, โ€œShe's going to be rolling a lot of people through there.โ€

Tickets for the monorail cost $5.

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