Comment The CN Tower used to do something like this. (Score 2) 123
It wasn't a two day ride, more like a two hour one. You had to check in at the spaceport in the basement of the CN Tower, where things like lasers (made visible by mist) would scan you, providing wonderful security theatre. It was all pretty fancy for a children's ride in the 1980's. Eventually you would get in to "the spaceship" which purportedly launched from the basement of the tower right out the very tippy top! I went two or three times as a kid, and had a blast. The last time that I went, there was a malfunction with the set, a gap in the facade, and I got to see the "spaceship" from the outside. It was of course just a flight simulator that had been converted in to a smallish movie theatre held up by a bunch of hydraulic pistons that allowed it to tilt and bump and turn. Great fun. I was sad when it shut down.
From Wikipedia, https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2F...:
Tour of the Universe was a space shuttle simulation ride located in the basement level of the CN Tower. Operating between 1985 and 1992, it was the world's first flight simulator ride.
The ride was the idea of Moses Znaimer and designed by SimEx. The name of the ride, Tour of the Universe, and its content were adapted from a work of the same name cowritten in 1980 by Robert Holdstock and Malcolm Edwards, who sold the rights for the ride.
Construction began in 1984 and the ride began operations in 1986. Built by Showscan Film, the ride used two Boeing 747 simulators designed and built by Redifusion Ltd in Crawley, UK. Showscan designed and built the spacecraft themed cabin that seated the 40 passengers. Director, special effects expert and Showscan owner Douglas Trumbull produced the show film. The ride system and its controls were later the basis for Disneyland's Star Tours ride.
The ride was replaced in 1992 with a similar attraction entitled "Space Race." It was later dismantled and replaced by two other SimEx rides in 1998 and 1999.
The ride featured a round trip spaceflight to Jupiter. Passengers first boarded an elevator that took them into the depths of the CN Tower (CN stands for Canadian National, one of the two major railroad companies at the time, and as far as I know, the only one that is still in operation, hence "CN Tower") and forward to the year 2019, arriving at Spaceport Toronto. Operated by CP (Canadian Pacific, the former competitor the CN) Air Interplanetary (or Canadian Interplanetary after CP Air was absorbed by Canadian in 1987), the shuttle resembled the US space shuttle, but instead of a cargo bay the ship had a passenger compartment.
Before boarding their flight, passengers moved through various themed areas of the spaceport such as Customs, Security and Medical. Passengers would be able to print out their tickets and be inoculated against space diseases such as "Ganymede Rash".
When aboard the interplanetary shuttle, passengers were launched upward through the hollow core of the CN Tower, arriving at a space station in orbit, and traveling to Jupiter while dodging an asteroid.