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ZDT's Amusement Park

2007 establishments in TexasAmusement parks in TexasAmusement rides closed in 2025Amusement rides introduced in 2015Buildings and structures in Guadalupe County, Texas
Closed roller coastersRoller coasters manufactured by The Gravity GroupTourist attractions in Guadalupe County, TexasUse American English from August 2025Wooden roller coasters
ZDTs Amusement Park Seguin Texas 2016
ZDTs Amusement Park Seguin Texas 2016

ZDT's Amusement Park was a 10-acre (4.0 ha) family amusement park located in Seguin, Texas. The park first opened in 2007 and had grown to feature 12 attractions, three of which are water rides, along with a video game arcade. It was open year-round with the exception of its water rides which had operated from March through September. The park opened its first roller coaster, Switchback, in 2015. The park permanently closed on August 17, 2025, due to rising operational costs.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article ZDT's Amusement Park (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

ZDT's Amusement Park
North Bowie Street,

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N 29.58 ° E -97.967 °
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ZDT's Amusement Park

North Bowie Street
78155
Texas, United States
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ZDTs Amusement Park Seguin Texas 2016
ZDTs Amusement Park Seguin Texas 2016
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Sebastopol House Historic Site
Sebastopol House Historic Site

Sebastopol House Historic Site is an antebellum Greek Revival house built of concrete, located in Seguin, Texas, United States. Joshua W. Young built it between 1854 and 1856 for his sister, Catherine LeGette. Today Sebastopol is one of some 20 surviving buildings that give Seguin the largest concentration of early 19th century structures in the U.S. As a result of its unusual concrete construction, Sebastopol House was included in the Historic American Buildings Survey (H.A.B.S.) in 1936, made a Registered Texas Historical Landmark in 1964, and then listed on the National Register of Historic Places on August 25, 1970. It is a prime example of the limecrete structures of Seguin. The house is constructed entirely of unreinforced cast-in-place concrete and it is one of the oldest and largest structures in the state using this building method. This process was developed and patented by doctor and chemist John Park, who had moved to Seguin in 1846. But he soon had imitators and competitors, contractors like Joshua Young. Often slaves did the hard physical work, using boards to build forms, kept at the right width (12 to 18 inches) by screws and oak spacers when the limecrete mixture was poured into the forms, and allowed to harden. Then the forms were raised another foot or so and the process repeated. A large part of the "Park's concrete" mix was caliche, a thick deposit of gravelly clay that underlies Seguin. Usually the caliche was dug out on site, providing a basement level, as at Sebastopol. The caliche was then mixed with sand, lime made from nearby limestone deposits, and organic materials like straw or horsehair. The exterior walls were usually whitewashed, and the interiors often had woodwork or wainscoting of local walnut, oak or pecan. Joseph Zorn Jr. bought the house in 1874 and it remained in the Zorn family until 1961. Zorn was mayor of Seguin from 1890 to 1910, and played a major role in establishing the first system of free public schools in the town. The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department acquired the house and grounds by purchase in 1976 from the Seguin Conservation Society, which by agreement had preserved the house until the state agency could get funds for the restoration in its budget. Sebastopol was again opened to the public in September 1989. The house is restored to its 1880s appearance. In 2011 ownership was transferred to the City of Seguin.