Orange County Fire Rescue spokeswoman Kathleen Kennedy told The Associated Press no one was hurt following the Friday afternoon incident and all were taken off in an operation lasting about three hours with help from several firefighters.
She said the attraction, which is billed by operators as the largest observation wheel on the East Coast, had initially stopped for more than 45 minutes.
"All guests are safely evacuated," Kennedy told AP by phone Friday evening shortly after the last rider was removed about 7 p.M. She said firefighters on ladders helped the ride technical team that manually opened the doors.
Six elite rescue climbers with the fire rescue squad were dispatched but "thankfully" weren't needed for a climb, Kennedy said.
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Andrea Alava, a public relations manager for The Orlando Eye, issued a statement that the attraction had shut down as a safety precaution before the team went to a backup operation. She said its teams carried out the actual evacuation, not firefighters as some reports initially suggested.
At approximately 3:45 p.M., the operating systems for the Orlando Eye indicated a technical default with the system that monitors the wheel position of the Orlando Eye.
As a safety precaution, the attraction is designed to automatically shut down if communication with this system is interrupted," Alava said in an emailed statement.
"Immediately following the default, the operations team began working to resolve the matter to allow guests to disembark the attraction. A backup system was employed that allowed capsules to be moved to the platform and opened manually," the statement added.
There was no immediate indication when the attraction would reopen.
The Orlando Sentinel reported that some of those stranded were tweeting from the ride that it had been stopping and starting at one point as they waited to be taken off.
Kennedy said that all taken off were checked as a precaution but no one needed medical treatment. Photos on local media sites showed firefighters and others atop ladders around capsules that had been lowered to the platform.