Cornelius Vanderbilt Wood
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cornelius Vanderbilt Wood (1922 - March 14, 1992), usually called "C.V." or "Woody", was an American designer of amusement parks and planned communities. He is most noted as the chief designer of Disneyland.
Wood, who had earlier been Director of Industrial Engineering for an aircraft manufacturer in his native Texas, was hired away from his position at the Stanford Research Institute by Walt Disney to become Vice President and General Manager of Disney's nascent project, Disneyland. He was a key player in the design and creation of the amusement park, and the person most responsible for choosing its site.[1]
Wood and Walt Disney later fell out, and Disney fired Wood[1] (and Wood has subsequently been written out of all official histories of the Disney corporation).[2]
Wood went on to design more amusement parks; he billed himself as "The Master Planner of Disneyland" before a Disney lawsuit stopped him from using that title.[1] Wood, leading his firm known as Marco Engineering, Inc., helped create Magic Mountain (now Heritage Square at Golden, Colorado) in 1957, Pleasure Island (in Wakefield, Massachusetts) in 1959, Freedomland U.S.A. (on the current site of Co-op City in the Bronx), in 1960, and initial work on Six Flags Over Texas before work was taken over by Marco member Randall Duell. None of the first three amusement parks lasted longer than then a few years before closing. In 1991 Wood, who had become President of the Recreation Enterprises Division of Warner Bros., played an instrumental role in the design and development of Warner Bros. Movie World theme park in Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia, capping a noted theme park creating career.[3]
Wood was also the chief designer for Lake Havasu City;[4] that city's CV Wood Aquatic Center is named for him.
In addition to these achievements, Wood was the winner of the International Chili Society's 1969 Annual World's Championship Chili Cookoff [5] and had a small part in the B movie "Miami Supercops".[6]
[edit] External links
- Discussion of C.V. Wood at unoffical Disney commentary site laughingplace.com
- Virtual Museum of Magic Mountain
- Friends of Pleasure Island
- Rob Friedman's Freedomland Website
- Warner Bros. Movie World
- Lake Havasu City