Dinosaurs Park

btwood2
btwood2
First Reviewer
3 out of 5
Avg. Member Rating
3
Reviews
9
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Dinosaur Park

  • August 27, 2007
  • Rated 2 of 5 by Mandan Lynn from Smithwick, South Dakota
Dinosaur Park

Dinosaur Park
8am-8pm (June-August)
9am-5pm (May, September, October)

Dinosaur Park was one of my favorite places when I was growing up. The best part? It’s free! It’s a great place to spend an afternoon for the dinosaur-loving child in your family.

The park is pretty basic. It’s just five life-sized replicas of our favorite reptiles. We went time and time again when I was a kid, just climbing on and taking pictures with each dinosaur. I still have a picture of me with both of my grandparents -- one of the rare pictures my grandmother allowed us to take of her.

It’s located on Skyline Drive -- way up high, which gives you excellent views of Rapid City. There’s also a snack bar and a nice gift shop where you can pick up Black Hills Gold jewelry and other souvenirs.

Okay, as much as I love this place, I have to admit it’s probably a place you can skip in favor of more worthwhile attractions like Crazy Horse, Mt. Rushmore, the Black Hills Playhouse, and Reptile Gardens, but if you’re just looking to kill some time or if you have children to entertain, definitely check it out. Maybe you’ll see me there.

From journal My Black Hills

Dinosaur Park

  • August 5, 2005
  • Rated 4 of 5 by huddlesgirl from Centennial, Colorado
Dinosaur Park

In plain view from the baseball stadium where we spent a lot of our time in Rapid City was a giant dinosaur atop a mountain. With a short drive straight up you will fin yourself ontop of this mountain looking down on the city. There are seven life-size concrete replicas of dinosaurs placed in a park-like setting. The brontosaurus is 80 foot long and 28 foot high and can be seen from most places in the city. The exhibits are lighted until 10:00pm. Built in the early 1930s.

The park was built as a WPA project(Works Project Administration) in 1936 by paleontologist C.C. O’Hara. O'Hara, a retired professor, was a dinosaur enthusiast, and had even helped in uncovering many dino digs in the Badlands. He saw Rapid City taking shape as a tourist town, and wanted to help bring some more light (along with Mount Rushmore) to Rapid City. So he went to work on the concrete monsters (that actually are quite unimposing and friendly looking). This is a fun and free adventure complete with gift shop in this prehistoric park!

From journal A Touristy Tour Through Rapid City

Editor Pick

Dinosaurs on the skyline

  • September 3, 2004
  • Rated 3 of 5 by btwood2 from Rodeo, New Mexico
Dinosaurs on the skyline

Since our arrival in Rapid City, we were curious about the dinosaur high on the hill above town. At the Visitor Center, we learned that this long-necked brontosaurus was but one of a small herd (five, actually) of dinosaurs residing at (what else?) Dinosaur Park, a city park on Skyline Boulevard, which divides east and west Rapid City.

We at first took a wrong turn, ending up on aptly named Tower Road, also high up, and home to many radio, microwave, and cell phone towers. Backtracking, we found where we’d missed the turn, which isn’t signed at all when you’re coming from the south off Highway 16, and proceeded to drive along the spine of the hill that is Skyline Boulevard. Quite a few nice houses have been built and are sprouting up amidst the pines here.

Soon we arrived at Dinosaur Park and pulled into the parking lot in front of the gift shop. Across the street steps lead up to the abode of five bright green dinosaurs: besides the 80 foot long, 28 foot high brontosaurus at the highest spot on the ridge, there are a trachodon, triceratops, stegosaurus, and not so ferocious tyrannosaurus rex. Several families were walking the paths and climbing and descending the steps leading from one dinosaur to the next. The younger kids were taking particular delight in climbing on the rather friendly-looking dinosaurs, looking more like those on "Flintstones" than "Jurassic Park".

Dinosaur Park was built in 1936 by the WPA (Works Project Administration), brainchild of paleontologist C. C. O’Hara. During his career, this retired president of the South Dakota School of Mines had discovered ancient dinosaur bones in the Badlands, and thought dinosaur sculptures might be just the ticket to put Rapid City on the map. Rapid City promoters were also hoping that this would be an additional tourism draw to their city, besides the famous Mt. Rushmore sculptures. The dinosaurs were constructed of iron pipe set in concrete. The steel skeletons were covered with wire mesh, and concrete skins applied. It must have been fun for WPAers to help create these giant creatures and see them take shape. When the park first opened, the dinosaurs were all gray; at some point, they were repainted green. Now that theories hold that dinosaurs may have been as colorful as birds, I wonder what Rapid City will do when the dinos are due for another paint job.

From journal Slowing Down in Rapid City

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