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Adrenaline Peak

Euro-Fighter roller coastersOperating roller coastersRoller coasters in OregonRoller coasters introduced in 2018Roller coasters manufactured by Gerstlauer
Sellwood, Portland, OregonSteel roller coasters
Adrenaline Peak Oaks Amusement Park
Adrenaline Peak Oaks Amusement Park

Adrenaline Peak is a steel roller coaster at Oaks Amusement Park, just south of Portland, Oregon. The ride replaced the Pinfari Looping Thunder coaster in the park's South End, which closed after the 2017 season. The coaster was manufactured by Gerstlauer and is one of their Euro-Fighter coasters, containing three inversions and a vertical lift hill.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Adrenaline Peak (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Adrenaline Peak
Springwater on the Willamette, Portland Sellwood-Moreland

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 45.471589 ° E -122.662314 °
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Address

Oaks Amusement Park

Springwater on the Willamette
97202 Portland, Sellwood-Moreland
Oregon, United States
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Adrenaline Peak Oaks Amusement Park
Adrenaline Peak Oaks Amusement Park
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Nearby Places

Stephens Creek (Oregon)
Stephens Creek (Oregon)

Stephens Creek, a 2-mile (3 km) tributary of the Willamette River, flows entirely within the city of Portland in the U.S. state of Oregon. Beginning in the neighborhood of Hillsdale, it runs generally east through residential and commercial neighborhoods as well as patches of forest and parkland to join the Willamette slightly north of the Sellwood Bridge. Its course passes under Interstate 5 and down the canyon followed by Southwest Taylors Ferry Road. Stephens Creek enters the river at Willamette Moorage Park, which is part of a 35-acre (14 ha) group of natural areas called the South Portland Riverbank. The natural areas include Butterfly Park and Willamette Park as well as the moorage park and other public land parcels.Stephens Creek Nature Park, a 3.38-acre (1.37 ha) protected area at Southwest Bertha Boulevard and Chestnut Street, is near the creek's headwaters. It provides open space and a plant and animal refuge in an urban setting. Downstream, the Portland Bureau of Environmental Services and its partners completed work in 2008 to improve habitat for endangered fish species such as Chinook salmon that frequent the creek near its mouth.The Stephens Creek headwaters project was completed in 2007. Through an innovative pilot project called Green Streets, the headwaters basin of Stephens Creek was improved through the use of bioswales, which are specially engineered ditches on the side of the street, receive rain flowing off the asphalt. Rocks and native plants slow the water down. Water is directed to a wetland area acquired as part of the project. This allows rain to seep underground, cleans the water of contaminants, and moderates the water flows in the creek. This was a joint project between the local neighborhood residences and the City of Portland.