Walibi Belgium
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Previously known as Walibi (1975-1981) Walibi Wavre (1982-2000) Six Flags Belgium (2001-2004) | |
Location | Wavre, Walloon Brabant, Belgium |
---|---|
Coordinates | 50°41′55″N 4°35′26″E / 50.69861°N 4.59056°E |
Opened | 26 July 1975 |
Owner | Compagnie des Alpes |
Attractions | |
Total | ±50 |
Roller coasters | 9 |
Water rides | 3 |
Website | http://www.walibi.com/belgium/be-en |
Walibi Belgium is a 64-hectare (158.15 acres) theme park located in Wavre, Walloon Brabant, Wallonia, Belgium, close to the city of Brussels.[1] The park complex consists of the titular theme park and the Aqualibi indoor water park that is located next door. It is one of the largest theme parks in Belgium; with roughly 1.45 million visitors attending in 2018.[2]
Initially opened by entrepreneur Eddy Meeùs in 1975, Walibi expanded into a chain of six amusement parks located across Belgium, France, and Holland. The park spent a brief period in the 2000s under the Six Flags brand following Walibi's sale to the American-based theme park operator, but was reverted after being sold to Palamon Capital Partners and eventually its current owners Compagnie des Alpes.
History
[edit]The park originally opened on 26 July 1975 by entrepreneur Eddy Meeùs. The park's name; "Walibi", is aabbreviated play-on-words of three local districts within the province of Walloon Brabant near where the park sits - Wavre, Limal, and Bierges.[3] A Wallaby (a macropod cousin of the kangaroo) was used as the mascot of the park to fit in with its name.[3] The park opened with children's attractions that were themed to the Belgian comic franchise Tintin, including The secret of the Unicorn and Tintin in the jungle , of which the park held the license until the end of 1995.[4] The park also opened with a water skiing section which remained until 1994.[3]
An indoor water park - Aqualibi, opened next door to the park in 1987.[5]
Six Flags Belgium
[edit]In December 1997, with an interest to enter the European market and to compete with rival Disneyland Paris, the US-based Six Flags (1961-2024)#Premier Parks (later Six Flags) announced that they would purchase a controlling stake in the Walibi Group from Eddy Meeùs.[6] For 1998, the park opened up a new themed area based on the Lucky Luke franchise entitled "Lucky Luke City" which contained the world's largest drop tower attraction; entitled "Dalton Terror".[7]. The addition of the area marked the last new addition to the park under Meeùs' control. For 1999, Premier added three new attractions to the park intending to make it the flagship of Six Flags' European operations.[8][9]
Shortly after Premier rebranded under the Six Flags name, plans were put into place for the park potentially being rebranded under the Six Flags umbrella.[10] On December 29, 2000, Six Flags officially announced that the park would be renamed as Six Flags Belgium.[11] with the park's official renaming was put into place in January. The relaunch of the park would coincide with over $30 million worth of investments and changes[12][13][14] with the most major being the addition of Warner Bros. properties into the park, including attractions based on Looney Tunes and DC Comics characters; while Walibi would be replaced with Bugs Bunny as the park's new mascot. Despite the Americanisation of the park, the Belgian-based Lucky Luke would remain.[15] The rebranding of the park was put in place after sister park Walibi Flevo's rebranding as Six Flags Holland led to a heavy boost in attendance.[16] The park officially reopened under its new name on 28 April, after a delay from its originally intended opening of 8 April.[17] On 24 November 2001, Eddy Meeùs passed away at the age of 76.[18]
StarParks/Grévin & Cie
[edit]Following financial difficulties and other issues, Six Flags announced the sale of their European Parks division to an undisclosed buyer on 15 March 2004.[19] The purchaser was later revealed to be the London-based Palamon Capital Partners, who rebranded the chain as StarParks. The Warner Bros. license was not included in the sale.[20][21] On April 16, Palamon announced that the park would rebrand back under the Walibi name for the 2005 season, following a fan-casted polling vote.[22] At the end of the park's 2004 season on 7 November, it was announced that Six Flags Belgium would become Walibi Belgium upon the start of the park's 2005 season on 26 March, while Walibi would return as the park's mascot (although he had a semi-return at Aqualibi near the end of 2003([23]); having been on a four year "world tour" and being handed back the keys to the park from Bugs Bunny. A newly introduced group of characters (deemed his "world tour" friends) and a female counterpart named Walibelle were also introduced as part of the park's new storyline. These characters would appear in Walibi Folies, which would rebrand from Bugs Bunny Land, while the 3D cinema would replace the Looney Tunes show with SpongeBob SquarePants 4-D.[24] Walibi's promotions director Dominique Fallon had proclaimed that former owner Eddy Meeùs had cited the Six Flags rebranding as a "mistake".[25]
In March 2006, Palamon Capital Partners sold the Walibi chain, including Walibi Belgium, to Grévin & Cie, a subsidiary of Compagnie des Alpes. This was done for Palamon to focus its operations solely on sister park Movie Park Germany.[26][27]
In 2017, the park announced a 100 million euro make-over, featuring a re-theme of 75% of the park and adding several new rides. One of them being an Intamin megacoaster.
From 2012 to 2014, the Aqualibi waterpark underwent a major refurbishment, costing €11 million (US$16 million).[28]
In March 2014, the park's license for Lucky Luke was not renewed.[29]
Rides
[edit]Present rides
[edit]Roller coasters
[edit]Name | Model | Year Opened | Manufacturer |
---|---|---|---|
Psyké Underground (formerly Sirocco & Turbine) | Shuttle Loop | 1982 | Schwarzkopf |
Calamity Mine | Mine Train | 1992 | Vekoma |
Vampire | Suspended Looping Coaster | 1999 | Vekoma |
Cobra | Boomerang | 2001 | Vekoma |
Loup Garou | Wooden roller coaster | 2001 | Vekoma |
Pulsar | Power Splash | 2016 | Mack Rides |
Tiki-Waka | Bobsled Coaster | 2018 | Gerstlauer |
Fun Pilot | Force 190 | 2019 | Zierer |
Kondaa | Megacoaster | 2021 | Intamin |
Unknown | Launch Coaster | 2025 | Gerstlauer |
Water rides
[edit]Name | Model | Year Opened | Manufacturer |
---|---|---|---|
Radja River | River rafting ride | 1988 | Intamin |
Gold River Adventure | Tow boat ride | 1978-2024 | Intamin |
Flash Back | Log flume | 1995 | MACK Rides |
Thrill rides
[edit]Name | Type | Year Opened | Built By |
---|---|---|---|
Dalton Terror | Drop tower | 1998 | Intamin |
Buzzsaw | Top Spin | 2001 | Huss Rides |
Family rides
[edit]Name | Model | Year Opened | Manufacturer |
---|---|---|---|
Salsa Y Fiesta | Teacups | 2001 | Chance Rides |
Music Xpress | 2 ft (610 mm) narrow gauge[30] train ride | 1995 | Severn Lamb |
Le Tapis Volant | Flying carpet ride | 2001 | SBF Visa |
W.A.B Cinema 4D | 4D Cinema | 2005 | Sim-Exiwerks |
Le Grand Carrousel | Carousel | 1990 | Euro Sujets |
Le Palais du génie | Mad House | 2001 | Vekoma |
Silverton | Sidecar XL | 2023 | Technical Park |
Dark rides
[edit]Name | Type | Year Opened | Built By: |
---|---|---|---|
Popcorn Revenge | Interactive darkride | 2019 | ETF Ride Systems |
Challenge Of Tutankhamon | Interactive darkride | 2003 | Sally Corporation |
Former rides
[edit]Roller coasters
[edit]Name | Model | Year Opened | Year Closed | Manufacturer |
---|---|---|---|---|
Tornado | Corkscrew with Bayerncurve | 1979 | 2002 | Vekoma |
Jumbo Jet | Jet Star | 1978 | 1991 | Schwarzkopf |
Vertigo | Mountain Glider | 2007 | 2008 | Doppelmayr |
Grand 8 | Zyklon Z47 | 1975 | 1983 | Pinfari |
Coccinelle | Tivoli | 1999 | 2017 | Zierer |
Thrill rides
[edit]Name | Type | Year Opened | Year Closed | Built By |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bounty | Looping Starship | 1993 | 2002 | Intamin |
Inferno | Enterprise | 1975 | 2010 | Huss Rides |
Family rides
[edit]Name | Type | Year Opened | Year Closed | Built By |
---|---|---|---|---|
Big Yoyo | Paratower | 1981 | 1998 | Vekoma |
La Grande Roue | Ferris wheel | 1979 | 2016 | Vekoma |
Tuf Tuf Club | Bumper Cars | 2001 | 2023 | Reverchon |
Events
[edit]Summer Nights
[edit]During 5 Saturdays in a row in July and August, Walibi Belgium has their late night openings. During those nights, the park remains open until 11:00 p.m. and offers additional entertainment. Each night ends with a firework show around the lake, sometimes with a themed show.
Halloween
[edit]One of the events the park is known for is Halloween, traditionally during the last weekends of October and autumn holiday in Belgium. During Halloween, Walibi Belgium transforms into hell on earth with scary entertainment and other festivities. The park started celebrating Halloween in 2000 on a small scale, leading it to be one of the biggest Halloween events in Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg.
Since 2008, Walibi Belgium introduced a storyline around the event which is still running in 2013. Every year, the story has an open ending, making visitors curious for the following year. This happens during a finale show, including special effects, music and actors. The park also creates scare-zones, zones in the park that get a Halloween theme. The park is also known for their number of haunted houses during Halloween. For 2012 and 2013, guests were welcomed in 6 different haunted houses spread over the park. The haunted houses the park offers are nowadays known for their often strange locations and aggressive and violent actors.
For 4 to 5 days, the park also has Halloween nights, with the park staying open until 9 p.m. nightly.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Walibi Belgium theme park looking to expand on the fun". Stars and Stripes. Retrieved 2022-08-26.
- ^ "Popcorn Revenge: Walibi Belgium's new dark ride". Blooloop. 2019-06-05. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
- ^ a b c Whitworth, David (2018-01-26). "Walibi Belgium". InterPark. Retrieved 2022-08-26.
- ^ "Oudste attractie in Walibi Belgium gaat verdwijnen" [Oldest attraction in Walibi Belgium is going away]. looopings.nl (in Dutch). 2023-10-24. Retrieved 2024-08-09.
- ^ "Walibi and Aqualibi undergoes €100 million investment to transform the theme parks". www.brusselstimes.com. Retrieved 2022-08-26.
- ^ Du Bois, Martin. "Premier Parks to Acquire Walibi In Effort to Take On Euro DisneyInc". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved July 3, 2024.
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20121108145223/http://archives.lesoir.be/un-milliard-d-investissements-en-cinq-ans-a-wavre-walib_t-19971213-Z0ELHN.html
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20121108142757/http://archives.lesoir.be/wavre-trois-nouvelles-attractions-un-investissement-de-_t-19990122-Z0G9CP.html
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20121108145009/http://archives.lesoir.be/les-proprietaires-americains-mettent-le-paquet-walibi-v_t-19990122-Z0G9CE.html
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20131031001555/http://archives.lesoir.be/attractions-le-kangourou-de-walibi-avale-par-bugs-bunny_t-20000823-Z0JL3K.html
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20131031045110/http://archives.lesoir.be/attractions-1-2-milliard-et-un-nouveau-nom-six-flags-be_t-20001229-Z0K2Y7.html
- ^ https://www.ultimaterollercoaster.com/news/archives/march01/stories/031201_02.shtml
- ^ O'Brien, Tim (January 15, 2001). "Walibi Wavre to become Six Flags Belgium; $30 Mil infusion planned". Amusement Business. p. 12. Retrieved August 25, 2022.
- ^ https://www.ultimaterollercoaster.com/news/archives/march01/stories/031201_02.shtml
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20150407163320/http://archives.lesoir.be/wavre-metamorphose-du-parc-d-attractions-ne-dites-plus-_t-20010409-Z0KANV.html
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20141203011041/http://archives.lesoir.be/marketing-six-flags-elargit-la-cible-de-l-ex-walibi-adi_t-20010428-Z0KDZ4.html
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20150407163320/http://archives.lesoir.be/wavre-metamorphose-du-parc-d-attractions-ne-dites-plus-_t-20010409-Z0KANV.html
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20121108141705/http://archives.lesoir.be/deces-le-pere-de-walibi-le-kangourou-est-orphelin_t-20011126-Z0L73T.html
- ^ Meza, Ed (15 March 2004). "Six Flags sells parks in Europe". Variety.
- ^ "€155m theme parks thrill for Palamon". Private Equity International. 2012-12-30. Archived from the original on 2021-03-07. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
- ^ "investment Detail StarParks". Palamon Capital Partners, LP. Archived from the original on March 21, 2019. Retrieved August 10, 2017.
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20141203012315/http://archives.lesoir.be/diagonale-le-grand-retour-du-kangourou-a-wavre-limal-bi_t-20040416-Z0P8UJ.html
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20141202235559/http://archives.lesoir.be/tourisme-des-ce-26-mars-le-parc-se-peuple-de-nouveaux-p_t-20050228-Z0QC4Q.html
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20141026090514/http://archives.lesoir.be/loisirs-six-flags-belgium-a-ferme-definitivement-ses-po_t-20041109-Z0PYQF.html
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20121108143141/http://archives.lesoir.be/tourisme-des-ce-26-mars-le-parc-se-peuple-de_t-20050228-Z0QC4Q.html
- ^ "Compagnie des Alpes Gains Ground..." www.eap-magazin.de. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20131031024249/http://archives.lesoir.be/walibi-prend-l-accent-francais_t-20060505-005A8U.html
- ^ dt-admin (2011-05-05). "Aqualibi 2.0". Park World Online - Theme Park, Amusement Park and Attractions Industry News. Retrieved 2022-08-26.
- ^ https://www.looopings.nl/weblog/2276/Walibi-Belgium-ontslaat-stripheld-Lucky-Luke.html
- ^ Severn Lamb - Lincoln model Archived February 10, 2014, at the Wayback Machine