The Last of the Coney Island Carousels Leaves New York

Photo: Getty Images
The work is stage-by-stage, too. Once in Marion, Goings's team of merry-go-round men will spend "hundreds of hours" removing the original paint and painstakingly applying coat after coat of varnish in the original color, selected using vintage photos from newsreels that he has asked the public to submit as a guide. Our steeds are “very restorable,” Goings said. “They don’t have missing legs and have all their eyes and tails and ears.”
But it will still likely cost a bundle: Goings wouldn’t tell us what he's billing the city, but he did charge Philadelphia's Please Touch Museum around $1 million for a comparable job. So, how does one get into this line of work, anyway? Goings, whose business, Carousels & Carvings, plays doctor to up to fifteen rides a year (including carousels in Prospect Park and on the Santa Monica Pier), was once a furniture-maker, until he was asked to restore a park ride in his hometown. It was then he found his true passion. After all, he said, “Tables don’t have eyes, ears, and noses.” —Sarah Maslin Nir

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