The backyard of the Seattle home of Will Miceli β93 is just 40 feet by 15 feet. So when his 11-year-old son, Parker, suggested they build a roller coaster there, he initially thought the idea was too wacky, even for him. βBut a few months later,β Will confesses, βwe decided to just do it.β
How do you build a backyard roller coaster? Will and his family watched YouTube videos to see how other people had done it. Then they designed and built a track, using wood and PVC pipe, that launches from an elevated platform beside their deck, hurtles downward, banks 90 degrees around the garage, and slopes upward to slow and finally stop the custom-made wooden cart. Two playground balls serve as the bumper at the end of the run. Total cost? About $500. βScrews were the most expensive part,β Will noted. Itβs no Cyclone, but on the YouTube video that Will posted (watch it at williston.com/bulletin), the ride still elicits screams of delight from Parker.
Will is a stay-at-home dad now. Heβs started a film production company, Fremont Films, and does corporate videos and βfun/goofyβ projects, he said. Before leaving the corporate world, he started a health care software company and worked as a business consultant. Asked how his 91΄σΙρ education impacted his life, including his interest in constructing elaborate and potentially dangerous DIY projects, Will answered, βI had to work pretty independently at 91΄σΙρ on my class work, sports, and other activities. Iβd say getting skills to work independently was super helpful. In fact, I did more school work at 91΄σΙρ than I did in college.β Whatβs next for the Miceli family? One project getting serious consideration: a parkour park.