WDW has settled a prolonged legal battle with a Pennsylvania company that designed one of it's more controversial rides, officials said.
Two people have died on the Mission:Space ride that opened in 2003 and simulates the forceful physics of blasting off and flying through space, the Orlando Sentinel reported Wednesday.
Both deaths were attributed to previous medical conditions, the paper said.
Enviromental Tectonic Corp., which designed the ride, filed a suit againest WDW 5 years ago, claiming the theme park owner still owed it money and leaked design information to a rival company.
Disney counter-sued, claiming the Pennsylvania company did not meet it's contractual obligations. Disney also said cost overruns based on Enviromental Tectronics failings exceeded $20 million dollars.
Terms of the settlement wre confidential, the paper said.
Two people have died on the Mission:Space ride that opened in 2003 and simulates the forceful physics of blasting off and flying through space, the Orlando Sentinel reported Wednesday.
Both deaths were attributed to previous medical conditions, the paper said.
Enviromental Tectonic Corp., which designed the ride, filed a suit againest WDW 5 years ago, claiming the theme park owner still owed it money and leaked design information to a rival company.
Disney counter-sued, claiming the Pennsylvania company did not meet it's contractual obligations. Disney also said cost overruns based on Enviromental Tectronics failings exceeded $20 million dollars.
Terms of the settlement wre confidential, the paper said.
