~Low Ridership
~Expensive to maintain
~SEAS Financial Woes
~Prime Location
~Licensing running out (I think I've seen rumors of this out there)
Also, apparently BGW did some things with the ride they weren't supposed to, like when they changed the ride to make it more "thrilling" when they removed the ballroom scene and stuff. Apparently those ride vehicles were never meant to be able to spin at a high (ish) speed with a full load, and that did a number on the vehicles, hence the removal of the spinning. It was expensive to maintain the ride, but it is more so the fact that they went a while without maintenance. They wouldn't do much periodic refurb to the ride to keep cost low, they more would wait years to do anything and then suddenly a huge cost faced them to bring everything back together. The ride closing is a big part negligence as well, and I blame that mostly on AB losing control of their company and Busch being passed down like an unwanted child. This contributed to the low ridership since people every time they rode it got a slightly worse ride than the last, and it just became a lost cause. The ride wouldn't draw new people in, and its ridership was composed of the people who were attached to it already, so it wasn't much of a smart business move to attempt to keep the ride around.