Adventurers flock to abandoned Newfoundland amusement park, railway site
TRINITY, N.L. — Once a bustling family attraction and the site of a rare piece of North American railway history, visiting the Trinity Train Loop in eastern Newfoundland now feels like walking into a post-apocalyptic movie scene.
Train cars with smashed windows are covered in graffiti. The mangled tracks guide visitors through a wooded area near Trinity, on the island’s Bonavista Peninsula, straight into the eerie space of a crumbling amusement park, complete with a collapsed, rusting ferris wheel and an empty swimming pool.
Beer bottles, plastic and cigarette butts litter the remnants of a mini golf course, all set beside a stunning, otherwise peaceful woodland stream.
The loop operated from 1911 until 1984, when the Bonavista railway branch shut down, according to the Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage website. Businessman Francis Kelly later bought the site and built the amusement park. After shutting down in 2004, the site sustained more damage when Hurricane Igor swept through eastern Newfoundland in 2010, leaving behind the decrepit appearance it holds today.