New roller coaster replaces the one Sandy plunged into sea
SEASIDE HEIGHTS, N.J. — Nearly five years after Superstorm Sandy plunged a roller coaster into the sea in what became one of the storm’s most enduring images, the ride has been replaced — safely inland this time.
Hydrus opened this month at the Casino Pier amusement park, built above the beach rather than out over the water to prevent another catastrophe. It’s not only thrilling riders; it’s also raising spirits in a section of the Jersey shore where not everything is yet back to normal after the October 2012 storm.
“This is part of the rebirth of the town,” said Mayor Anthony Vaz, who was among the many Seaside Heights residents displaced from their homes by the storm. “It’s like a new start for us.”
Seeing the Jet Star rusting away in the surf was painful, the mayor said.


