Photos Richard has uploaded
Here are all of the photos that Richard has uploaded.

The queue area is getting a bit of work, though looks to be staying roughly the same.

The wave has been repainted and features a few particularly foreboding sharks.

Wipeout sits in pieces as it gets a complete refurbishment.

All that remains of Reef Diver is its concrete foundations.


Flat ride construction is relatively straight-forward. Once the site is cleared the new ride will come together quite quickly.

The first part of the process is clearing the remains of Reef Diver and surrounding landscaping.

Work commences on Dreamworld's newest attraction.

It's fair to say that the new ride will spin. For those playing guess-the-ride, this narrows your options down to just about every flat ride ever.

Dreamworld's Tower of Terror shop has joined Movie World's (former) Harry Potter shop in selling weird new-age dragon crap.

Your move, Movie World.

Is it possible that no supervisor, maintenance staff or park official has walked past this faded and tattered banner prominently featured in Motocoaster's queue and thought that maybe it should be replaced?
Motocoaster continues to thrill.
One argument presented for keeping the structure was that even as a defunct ride it adds to the mining theme of the area. But as the mountain continues to fade and fall apart it only detracts from the area.
There's gold in them thar hills! Unfortunately, said gold is nasty, decaying fiberglass.
Obligatory Eureka Mountain update: it's now been 7 years, 7 months and 2 days since Eureka Mountain closed and it still sits in the park.
At least we think it's Dreamworld – the logo at the entrance has disappeared.

One of the best pieces of ride signage you'll find in Australia.

Superman Escape features two airtime-inducing camel backs.