All Guides Cedar Point
Park Guide Cedar Point Published July 13, 2026Updated July 13, 2026
The History of Gemini at Cedar Point

The History of Gemini

Gemini is a race. Two trains, one red and one blue, leave the station side by side and run a mirror-image course to the finish, and the outcome changes from ride to ride. It opened in 1978 and is still one of the most-ridden coasters at Cedar Point.

Red against blue

The name Gemini means the twins, and the ride lives up to it. Its two tracks run parallel for most of the course, close enough that riders famously reach out to high-five the train beside them, then split into separate spirals before racing back together to the line. Cedar Point advertised it at its debut as the tallest, fastest, and steepest roller coaster in the world, a bold billing for a park that was just beginning to build its reputation on record-breaking rides.

A coaster in disguise

Gemini looks like a giant wooden coaster, with a towering lattice of Douglas fir holding it up, but it does not ride like one. Underneath, it runs on smooth steel tubular track mounted on that wooden structure, which is why it glides where a true wooden coaster of its size would rattle. That combination has helped make it one of the most durable and heavily ridden coasters in the park, sending millions of racing pairs down the track every season.

One thing to know

Despite the enormous wooden framework that makes it look like a classic woodie, Gemini actually rides on steel track, which is the secret to how smoothly it runs.

Gemini is one chapter in the history of Cedar Point.

Gemini at a glance

FactDetail
Opened1978
ManufacturerArrow
TypeSteel racing coaster on a wooden structure
Height125 feet
Top speed60 mph
Length3,935 feet per track
Inversions0
StatusOperating

Based on real-time wait data from 56 US theme parks — updated daily by Thoosie.

Plan your perfect park day

Real-time wait times, Smart Route planning, and crowd predictions for Cedar Point and 56 top US theme parks.

Join the Waitlist → Live wait times at Cedar Point →