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Jaguar ! : Buckle up for a look at this summer’s theme park offerings: a new water playground and a one-of-a-kind roller coaster

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

When designers at Knott’s Berry Farm let their imaginations roam, it’s not long before they’re fenced in by an ever-present reality: the lack of real estate. Knott’s is cozy by amusement park standards, and land for new attractions is at a premium, as evidenced by the design of the park’s two biggest roller coasters.

Montezooma’s Revenge, built in 1978, is a straight line: through a 360-degree loop, up a ramp, then a return trip through the loop backward. Boomerang, constructed in 1990 on the site of the old Corkscrew, packs its thrills onto a tiny slice of property, yet manages to turn its passengers upside-down six times in less than a minute.

But with the opening today of Jaguar!, Knott’s designers have managed to hop the fence. The ride’s 2,700 feet of track take a luxurious (by roller-coaster standards) three minutes to travel, and the ride achieves its length with a minimum of doubling back.

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It manages to do that by breaking what seems to be an unspoken rule of roller coasters. Most stay politely within their boundaries, while Jaguar! breaks out of its cage and roams one-sixth of the park, gliding above the milling crowds. Launched from a Mayan-style temple in Fiesta Village, Jaguar! lopes toward the carnival-style Slammer ride before turning coyly aside and then threading the loop of Montezooma’s Revenge, prowling teasingly close to the Timber Mountain Log Ride, crossing over Reflection Lake and then heading back to the temple.

Working with an eye toward such neighbors, however, is nothing new for Robin Hall, the park’s vice president of design and architecture. He had to work with tight spaces when he designed a roller coaster for the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minn.

“That was a very contained environment,” Hall said. “I came up with this idea of a sort of ribbon through the sky.”

It was a concept he returned to when he designed Jaguar! with another Mall of America veteran, Tracy Caviola, the Knott’s manager of design. The design team had a rare piece of somewhat open land to work with, the site of the now-gone Studio K teen dance club and a small picnic area, although the property wasn’t big enough in itself to house a major new attraction.

Although the ride has a number of fast, swooping curves and quick drops, it lacks the dramatic, gut-wrenching thrills of big drops and loops that accent some of the Southland’s more extreme rides. Park spokesmen, however, are hesitant to use the word family in describing the ride’s target audience--for fear of scaring off coaster enthusiasts.

But the height requirement is shorter than those for the Boomerang and Montezooma’s Revenge, and spokesman Bob Ochsner said Knott’s is increasingly targeting a different demographic: families with small children. It can be called symbolic of the park’s decreasing emphasis on teens that the new ride sits where Studio K used to be.

Hall said he designed the ride with families in mind, but the ride he ended up with has more thrills than he planned.

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“It’s faster than I thought it was going to be. It’s getting good reactions from our fairly jaded rides-maintenance people,” Hall said before the ride had opened to the public.

He likes to emphasize the minimal ride structure and elegantly thin track: “You really feel like you’re up there flying. You don’t feel like you’re on this road or highway.”

The coaster has a strong thematic element, too, complete with a built-in “legend” about, natch, a jaguar. The temple that houses the ride queue and loading area was modeled loosely on classic pre-Columbian and Mayan architecture in such areas as Tikal, Guatemala, and Copan, Honduras. Murals inside the structure were inspired by a recent article in National Geographic that featured computer enhancements of the Mayan murals found at the ruins in Bonampak, in the Yucatan region of Mexico.

There are fanciful elements as well, such as a ball of flame that shoots from the top of the temple as Jaguar! whizzes nearby and, near the end, two jaguar sculptures that breathe fire and fog across the track.

* Knott’s Berry Farm, 8039 Beach Blvd., Buena Park. Summer park hours are 9 a.m. to midnight daily. Admission is $18.50-$28.50. (714) 220-5200.

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