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Thorpe Park, formerly also known as Thorpe Park Resort, is a theme park located in the village of Thorpe between the towns of Chertsey and Staines-upon-Thames in Surrey, England, 20 miles (32 km) southwest of Central London. It is operated by Merlin Entertainments and includes rides, themed cabins, live events and Hyperia, the United Kingdom's tallest and fastest rollercoaster at over 236ft and 129kmph, it also includes Europe's tallest element and the worlds first outer banked airtime hill. In 2019, Thorpe Park was the UK's third most visited theme park (1.9 million visitors), behind Alton Towers and Legoland Windsor.[2] However, in 2020, due to the coronavirus pandemic, the park only had a 125-day operation season, along with limited capacity, leading to massively reduced visitor numbers.

Thorpe Park
LocationChertsey and Staines, Surrey, England
Coordinates51°24′17″N 0°30′47″W / 51.40472°N 0.51306°W / 51.40472; -0.51306
StatusOperating
Opened24 May 1979; 45 years ago (1979-05-24)
OwnerLXi REIT[1]
Operated byMerlin Entertainments
General managerNeil Poulter (Divisional Director)
SloganThe Home Of Feel-Good Thrills
Operating seasonTheme Park
March – November
Thorpe Shark Cabins
March – November / December (private events)
Thorpe Park Marquee
March – November / December (private events)
Attendance2023: 1,500,000 (Increase23%)
Area410 acres (1.7 km2; 170 ha) *Total combined area including Lakes and all back of house areas
Attractions
Total27
Roller coasters8
Water rides4
Websitewww.thorpepark.com

After demolition of the Thorpe Park Estate in the 1930s, the site became a gravel pit, but in the early 1970s part of that gravel pit was flooded, creating a unique water-based environment for the park, with the intention of building a leisure attraction on it. Thorpe Park resort was built on that site in 1979, and being partially flooded it allowed visitors to view Thorpe Park as an island. It has since grown into a major theme park in the UK and one of the top 10 theme parks in Europe Major attractions include Tidal Wave, a large water ride; Ghost Train, a dark ride; as well as a number of rollercoasters including Colossus, Nemesis Inferno, Stealth, Saw – The Ride, The Swarm, The Walking Dead: The Ride, and Hyperia.

History

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Gravel Pit and Water Sports Resort

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The demolition of the Thorpe Park Estate in the 1930s transformed the grounds into a gravel pit, originally owned by Ready Mixed Concrete Limited. RMC excavated gravel from the site for 30 years from 1941 until 1970 when they began to plan a transformation of the site into a leisure based visitor attraction. Initial concepts planned for the attraction to be themed around the 'History of the British People as a Maritime Nation' achieved by flooding the now empty gravel pits[3]

 
Thorpe Park Lake in July 1979, the year the park opened to the public

In 1975 the Water Ski World Championships were held on the lake.[4] RMC established a subsidiary, Leisure Sport Limited, to operate the 400-acre (160 ha) park for water sports, leisure and heritage exhibitions, at a cost of £3 million.[5]

The park was formally opened to the public by Lord Louis Mountbatten on 24 May 1979,[3][6] his final public appearance shortly before he was assassinated by a bomb on board a fishing boat planted by the Provisional IRA in Mullaghmore, Ireland. In addition to lakes and parkland, the park featured a replica Stone Age cave, Celtic farm, Norman castle and Viking camp as well as ancient water vehicles and aircraft.[5]

Operation as a theme park

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In the early 1980s, the park was redeveloped into a theme park with permanent themed rides and attractions.[7] New attractions were opened throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Space Station Zero was the park's first rollercoaster, opening in 1984.[8] The last large attraction opened by the park's original owners was "X:\No Way Out" in 1996. Both attractions still operate to this day but under the names 'Flying Fish' and 'The Walking Dead: The Ride' respectively.

Between 1983 and 1989 the park was often used as a filming location for The Benny Hill Show.

In 1998, The Tussauds Group bought the park. This period saw large investment with major attractions opening such as Tidal Wave in 2000, Colossus in 2002, Nemesis Inferno in 2003 and Stealth in 2006.[9]

In May 2007, Blackstone Group purchased The Tussauds Group for $1.9 billion (USD) and the company was merged into Merlin Entertainments, who took over operation of Thorpe Park.[10][11] Dubai International Capital also acquired 20% of Merlin Entertainments.[12]

On 17 July 2007, as part of the financing for the Tussauds deal, Merlin sold Thorpe Park to private investment firm Prestbury, under a sale and leaseback agreement.[13] The site is operated by Merlin based on a renewable 35-year lease.[10] As of 2023, the site is owned by LXi REIT Plc.[1]

The target audience for the resort is teenagers and young adults, with rides such as 'Saw – The Ride' in 2009 and 'The Swarm' in 2011 being added. In 2014, Merlin also decided to target a broader family-based market with new attractions such as Angry Birds Land and the park's onsite hotel.[14]

On 20 February 2019, the official Twitter account of Thorpe Park confirmed the permanent closure of Logger's Leap, a log flume that had opened in 1989 but had been closed since 2015 due to the Smiler accident at Alton Towers that year.[15]

In 2021, Thorpe Park announced plans for a new rollercoaster in the Old Town section of the park under the project name of Project Exodus. During the 2023 Fright Nights event the name was revealed to be 'Hyperia' and it was set to be the tallest and fastest rollercoaster in the UK, at a height of 236 feet (71.9 metres) and a speed of 81 mph (130 km per hour).[16]

2024 Revamp

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Thorpe Park's old logo (2008–2023).

In preparation for the opening of Hyperia, Merlin announced major new investment for the older areas of the park to get them up to standard ready for the record breaking new rollercoaster. This began on the 30 October 2023 when Thorpe Park announced that Angry Birds Land would be permanently closing. The park closed for the 2023 season on Tuesday 31 October following the conclusion of that years Fright Nights event. Over the closed season the Sparkle Project[17] began which was a large refurbishment of many areas of the park which saw the refitting of many shops, repaint work for Colossus and Stealth, a new footbridge over Tidal Wave and much more. On 16 November 2023, the park revealed that the Angry Birds Land would be rethemed to Big Easy Boulevard[18] and on the 30 November 2023 Thorpe Park revitalised their branding, with a brand new logo (previously unchanged since 2008) and slogan, bidding farewell to their iconic "infinity" symbol (used for the park since 2001) and light-hearted An Island Like No Other tagline - instead marketing itself as the home of Feel-Good Thrills. The new logo comes with six palettes and patterns for their marketing materials and merchandise, stating that this “encapsulates the spirit of Thorpe Park”.[19]

The park re-opened for the 2024 season on 24 March with Big Easy Boulevard opening and construction on Hyperia completed. On 27 March 2024, Thorpe Park announced Hyperia's opening date of the 24 May 2024. The rollercoaster began testing on 16 April and cycled nearly everyday up until its press event on the 23 May when the first public riders were allowed on.

Hyperia, the UK's tallest and fastest rollercoaster opened to the public at the park on the planned date. However, on the morning of 25 May 2024, the park announced on social media that Hyperia would be closed until the 29 May due to 'unforeseen circumstances.' The re-opening was then delayed until 8 June via another social media post. The final delay to the re-opening date pushed it back to the 12 June where it did re-open successfully. The coaster would go on to valley two times once on 19 June and the 2 October 2024 but has operated reliably since.[20]

Rides and attractions

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Rollercoasters

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Name Picture Type Opened Territory Manufacturer Additional information
Hyperia   Hyper Coaster 2024 Fearless Valley Mack Rides A Mack Rides Hyper Coaster. It is themed to Hyperia (the 'Golden Goddess') being trapped on an island due to her fear of the water. Seeing the birds flying above, she was inspired she fashioned wings of unbreakable gold steel to fly above and fight the water to 'find her fearless', hence the slogan. Currently the UK's tallest and fastest rollercoaster, reaching a max height of 236 ft and speeds of over 80 mph.[21]
The Swarm   Wing Coaster 2012 Swarm Island Bolliger & Mabillard The UK's first winged coaster, opened in 2012. Was the first winged coaster to feature an inverted 'wing-over drop'. Between 2013 and 2016, the rear two rows were modified to face backwards. It is themed to a post-apocalyptic universe in which Thorpe Park is under attack from aliens. The Swarm is the only ride on Swarm Island. Minimum height 1.4 m (4 ft 7 in). Max Height Limit is 1.95 m (6 ft 5 in).
SAW -The Ride   Euro-Fighter 2009 Old Town Gerstlauer A custom Eurofighter featuring a 100 degree 100 ft (30 m) drop. Themed around the SAW movie franchise. It was branded as the world's first horror movie themed rollercoaster. Minimum height 1.4 m (4 ft 7 in).
Stealth   Hydraulic Launched Coaster 2006 Amity Speedway Intamin An Intamin hydraulic launch coaster, 205.1 ft (62.5 m) tall and accelerating from 0 to 80 mph (0 to 129 km/h) in 1.9 seconds.[22] It is the third tallest coaster in the UK and also the second fastest in the UK, recently beaten by Hyperia. It is considered to have the fastest acceleration in the world. It was previously recognised as the parks flagship attraction (prior to the release of Hyperia). It has a loose 1950s-era drag racing theme. Minimum height 1.4 m (4 ft 7 in). Max height limit is 1.95 m (6 ft 5 in).
Nemesis Inferno   Inverted 2003 The Jungle Bolliger & Mabillard A B&M inverted coaster opened in 2003, named after Nemesis at sister park Alton Towers. It has a loose volcano theme and features the first interlocking corkscrews on an inverted coaster. Minimum height 1.4 m (4 ft 7 in). It was filmed for The Inbetweeners episode "Thorpe Park".
Colossus   Steel Sit down 2002 Lost City Intamin Opened in 2002, achieving the world record for 'most inversions on a rollercoaster', with 10 inversions (this record was beaten by The Smiler at sister park Alton Towers with 14 inversions in 2013), marketed as 'the world's first ten looping rollercoaster'. It is loosely-themed around traversing the ruins of a lost Atlantean civilization. Minimum height 1.4 m (4 ft 7 in). Max height limit is 1.95 m (6 ft 5 in)
Walking Dead: The Ride   Steel Sit down 1996 (2013) (2018) The Dock Yard Vekoma Located at the centre of the park in a pyramid. Based on The Walking Dead franchise. On peak days, the ride's exit also includes live actors. Previously known as X (with a rave/dance music theme) and originally X:\No Way Out (with a computer virus theme). Minimum height 1.4 m (4 ft 7 in).
Flying Fish   Steel powered coaster 1984 (1990) (2007) Amity Beach Mack Rides Powered coaster. Opened in 1984 as an indoor coaster named Space Station Zero. It moved outdoors in 1990, in the location now occupied by Stealth. It reopened next to Amity Beach in 2007. Minimum height 0.9 m (2 ft 11 in).

Thrilling flat rides

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Name Picture Type Opened Territory Manufacturer Additional Information
Samurai   Top Scan 2004 Old Town Mondial Top scan ride, formerly at Chessington World of Adventures Resort under the same name. The ride was repainted when it moved to Thorpe Park, and has been repainted again for the 2024 season. Loosely themed to the sword of a Japanese samurai warrior. Minimum height 1.4 m (4 ft 7 in).
Quantum   Magic Carpet 2003 Lost City Fabbri Group Large magic carpet ride. Minimum height 1.2 m (3 ft 11 in).
Zodiac   Enterprise 2000 (2001) (2006) Lost City HUSS HUSS enterprise that first opened in 2000 as 'Enterprise', intended as a temporary attraction. It was renamed to 'Zodiac' (and made a permanent attraction) in 2001. At the end of the 2005 season, Zodiac was removed, and replaced by another HUSS Enterprise, relocated from Drayton Manor, where it was known as Cyclone. The replacement opened at the start of the 2006 season.[23] Minimum height 1.1 m (3 ft 7 in).
Vortex   Afterburner 2001 Lost City KMG KMG Afterburner ride which opened in June 2001. Minimum height 1.4 m (4 ft 7 in).
Detonator   Drop Tower 2001 (2014) (2022) (2024) Big Easy Boulevard Fabbri Group 35m tall drop tower. Originally named 'Detonator' and was added following the Thorpe Park fire. It was intended to be a temporary addition to the park, but was later made a permanent addition. It was renamed 'Detonator: Bombs Away' for the opening of Angry Birds Land in 2014. in 2023 it was renamed back to 'Detonator'. Previously themed to the angry bird Detonator, but now loosely themed to a firework. Max speed 45 Mph, Max G-force of 5.5G. Minimum height 1.3 m (4 ft 3 in). Received a soft retheme for 2024.
Rush   Screamin' Swing 2005 Lost City S&S Power Screamin' Swing which opened alongside Slammer in 2005. Minimum height 1.3 m (4 ft 3 in).

Water rides

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Name Picture Type Opened Territory Manufacturer Additional Information
Rumba Rapids
River rapids ride 1987 The Jungle Intamin It opened in 1987 as Thunder River and is one of the earliest remaining rides at Thorpe Park. It was sponsored by Ribena as Ribena Rumba Rapids from 2002 until 2006 until 2007 when the sponsorship was removed.
Storm Surge   Spinning Rapids Ride 2011 Amity WhiteWater West The ride has a 19.5 m (64 ft) lift and spins riders down a spiral chute. Originally located at Cypress Gardens, until Merlin acquired the park and made it Legoland Florida.
Tidal Wave   Shoot the Chute 2000 Amity Hopkins Rides When the ride was opened in 2000 it was the tallest water ride in Europe. The ride has had many sponsors including Dr Pepper and Oasis. Minimum height 1.2 m (3 ft 11 in).
Depth Charge   Water slide 1991 Amity Beach NV Aquatic Opened as the first four lane dinghy waterslide in the UK.

Family flat rides

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Name Picture Type Opened Territory Manufacturer Additional Information
Mr Monkey's Banana Ride   Pirate Ship 1994 The Jungle Metallbau Emmeln A small banana themed swinging ship ride themed to one of the Thorpe Park Rangers. Minimum height 0.9 m (2 ft 11 in).
Dobble Tea Party   Teacups 1986 (2023 Retheme) Big Easy Boulevard Mack Rides A teacups ride. Minimum height 1.1 m (3 ft 7 in). Originally sponsored by the Tetley brand of Tea, and was called 'Storm in a Tea Cup'. Received a Dobble card game sponsorship in 2023.
Big Easy Bumpers   Dodgems 2014 (2024) Big Easy Boulevard Bertazzon Dodgems ride added in 2014 for Angry Birds Land. Minimum height 1.1 m (3 ft 7 in) (with guardian over 1.3 m (4 ft 3 in)). Rebranded as 'Big Easy Bumpers' for the 2024 season. Formerly called King Pig's Wild Hog Dodgems
High Striker
Jumpin' Star 2017 (2022) Amity Zamperla A Jumpin' Star ride, relocated from Weymouth Sea Life, and opened in Old Town, as 'Lumber Jump', in 2017. Was rethemed and moved to Amity in 2022 as High Striker.

Minimum height 0.9 m (2 ft 11 in).

Dark rides and other rides

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Name Picture Type Opened Territory Manufacturer Additional Information
Ghost Train   Dark Ride 2016 (2017) (2023) The Dock Yard Merlin Magic Making, Intamin, Simworx Multi-sensory dark ride featuring live actors. Rethemed from Derren Brown’s Ghost Train at the start of the 2023 season.
Sunset Cinema   4D Cinema 1999 (2008) (2014) Big Easy Boulevard Initially opened in 1999, showing Pirates 4-D, operating until the end of the 2007 season.[24] From the start of the 2008 season, it featured Time Voyagers instead, operating until the end of the 2011 season, and remaining dormant throughout the 2012 and 2013 seasons.[25] It reopened in the 2014 season, as part of Angry Birds Land, featuring the Angry Birds 4D Experience.[26] This operated until the end of the 2023 season, with the rebrand of the area into the Big Easy Boulevard for 2024.[18] In 2024, Sunset Cinema will be showing Ready Player One: 4D Experience.
Amity Beach   Beach Area with Pool and Waterslides 1979 Amity Thorpe Park Originally named "Fantasy Reef", and 'exclusively for families with young children'. This attraction is intermittently open, generally only being open on certain days in the summer, weather permitting.[27]

Former attractions

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Name Picture Type Opened Closed Territory Manufacturer Additional Information
Slammer   Sky Swat 2005 2017 Old Town S&S Worldwide This was the last Sky Swatter in the world. It was permanently closed in 2017, after being plagued with technical issues for much of its period of operation.[28] Minimum height 1.4 m (4 ft 7 in).[29] Slammer remains standing-but-not-operating, with its removal confirmed for the 2024 closed season.[30]
Logger's Leap   Log Flume 1989 2015 Old Town Mack Rides Was the tallest log flume in the UK. The ride was last operational during the 2015 season, with the closure being officially confirmed during the 2019 season.[31] It was demolished in late 2022 to make way for Hyperia.
The Rocky Express   Sea Storm 1989 2021 Old Town Mack Rides Family friendly spinning train ride. Minimum height 0.9 m (2 ft 11 in). Closed and removed to make way for Hyperia.[32]
Canada Creek Railway   Miniature Railway 1989 2011 Old Town Severn Lamb[33] A miniature railway inside the park, which used to take guests from the (previously known as) 'Canada Creek' area of the park to the (now closed) 'Thorpe Farm' area of the park, with the return journey taking a detour through the woods behind the Old Town area, following a similar route to Logger's Leap. After the closure of Thorpe Farm in 2006,[34] the railway only traversed the loop by Logger's Leap.[33]
Pirates 4D 4D Cinema 1999 2007 Calypso Quay Iwerks Entertainment Replaced by Time Voyagers
Wicked Witches Haunt Dark ride 1983 (1994) 2000 Central Park Originally opened as Phantom Fantasia in 1983, with a tudor style building facade. The ride had a circular revolving loading platform area (similar in style to the one used on Rumba Rapids) with the ride vehicles themselves were being of a black ‘Clam Shell’ design, which were capable of turning 360 degrees, with a single lap bar that came down as you left the station area. These cars were different to those on most other rides as they were part of a continuous chain of cars rather than being part of separate trains. Scenes included an undertaker nailing down a coffin lid whilst the person inside tries to get out, Sweeney Todd gave his latest customer a ‘close shave’, Henry VIII having a banquet with guests while one of his wives ghostly disappeared and reappeared beside him, a knights graveyard, a ballroom scene with dancers who are later revealed to be skeletons and a sorcerer and his apprentice mixing up a potion. When the ride had finished, you exited through a gift shop themed around the ride. In 1994, it was re-themed to become Wicked Witches Haunt. As part of this re-theme, the entrance building was re-decorated and the entrance to the ride itself was moved around the corner from the original entrance, with a large cackling animatronic witch being placed above it. Inside all the scenes were painted in bright coloured UV paint to glow under the new UV lighting with new scenes being added such as witches cooking up a brew in a cauldron, large spiders and a new finale scene, in which the main Witch was stuck in a cell rattling the door as you had an On-Ride photo taken. However, on Friday 21 July 2000, after a major fire at the park which destroyed the ride buildings for both Mr Rabbit’s Tropical Travels and Wicked Witches Haunt, the latter never reopened, being burnt to the ground, eventually being replaced by Detonator.
Thorpe Farm   Petting farm 1982 2006 Thorpe Farm N/A A petting farm, accessible via the Canada Creek Railway or a ferry over Manor Lake (formerly being reachable by foot until 1992). This area was intended to be somewhat educational, not only allowing guests to get up close and personal with farm animals, but also to learn a bit about caring for these farm animals (and general farm activities). This area also featured a play area, and several shops and food outlets. Thorpe Farm was closed due to dwindling guest numbers in 2006, with the animals being rehomed. The area is currently inaccessible to guests, and is now used for storage and horticultural purposes.[34][35]
Wet Wet Wet 3 Lane Water Slide 1998 2022 Amity Beach WhiteWater West[36] Three waterslides, primarily designed for younger children, located in the Amity Beach area. This ride was rarely open; being part of Amity Beach, it could only be open when the rest of the attraction was open, but even then, this was not guaranteed to be open as well.
Eclipse
Ferris Wheel 2003 2004 Lost City Fabbri Group A ferris wheel. Closed at the end of the 2004 season due to negative guest feedback.[37] Replaced by Rush for the 2005 season. Eclipse was relocated to Chessington World of Adventures, where it reopened as Peeking Heights in 2005.
Angry Birds 4D Experience 4D Cinema 2014 2023 Angry Birds Land Simworx 4D Cinema that showed the Angry Birds 4D movie. Replaced Pirates 4-D and Time Voyagers. Closed to make way for new experiences.
Black Mirror Labyrinth Maze Attraction 2021 2023 Old Town Merlin Magic Making A maze that used cutting-edge technology & sensory-defying environments. Was based on the Netflix series Black Mirror. Closed at the end of the 2023 season.[38]

Territories

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In 2024, with the addition of Big Easy Boulevard and Fearless Valley, Thorpe Park is zoned into nine 'island territories'.

Map 
 
100m
110yds
 
Old
Town
 
The
Jungle
 
Swarm
Island
 
Amity
 
The Dock Yard
 
Lost
City
 
Port and
Basecamp
. 
 
Themed 'island territory' areas at Thorpe Park 
  •  Port & Basecamp 
  •  Amity 
  •  The Jungle 
  •  Big Easy Boulevard 
  •  Old Town 
  •  Lost City 
  •  Swarm Island 
  •  The Dock Yard 

  • Port and Basecamp includes the turnstile entrance, bridge, the dome and the playground.
  • Amity (originally 'Amity Cove') opened with Tidal Wave and now includes Stealth, Depth Charge, Amity Beach, High Striker, Flying Fish, and Storm Surge.
  • The Jungle contains Nemesis Inferno, Rumba Rapids, Mr Monkey's Banana Ride, and a street of restaurants.
  • Old Town is located towards the back of the park and includes Saw - The Ride and Samurai.
  • Fearless Valley is located towards the back of the park and includes Hyperia.
  • Lost City contains Colossus, Rush, Quantum, Vortex, and Zodiac.
  • Swarm Island opened as the plaza for The Swarm.
  • The Dock Yard (previously named 'The Depot' and 'Thorpe Junction') is the plaza immediately outside Ghost Train, previously known as "Derren Brown's Ghost Train", and includes the nearby The Walking Dead: The Ride rollercoaster, previously known as "X" and "X:\ No way out".
  • Big Easy Boulevard (formerly 'Angry Birds Land' between 2014-2023) is located between Amity and The Jungle, and contains Detonator, Big Easy Bumpers (Dodgems), and Sunset Cinema (4D Theatre).[18]

Port and Basecamp

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The 'Basecamp' area contains security, the turnstiles, toilets, business/staff reception, 'Island HQ' and bridge where guests enter the park. This leads to 'The Dome' which acts as a hub for the park, which houses 'Vibes Bar & Kitchen' (formerly Infinity Bar & Kitchen), an arcade area, The Coffee Shack, toilets, lockers, the Island Gift Shop, guest services, first aid, photo points and staff areas (canteen, 'The Core' and offices).

The dome was previously known as 'Port Atlantis' with an underwater Atlantian themed interior. Much of the scenery and underwater effects went missing since Merlin's acquisition of the park and was removed altogether after the building's change of theme.

The Dome remains open outside park operating hours to provide entertainment and dining facilities for guests staying at Thorpe Shark Cabins, including a breakfast buffet.

Amity

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Amity is set as a 1950s-era American fishing village hit by a tidal wave and opened with Tidal Wave in 2000. It was previously named 'Amity Cove', as still named on themed signage. The area was expanded in 2006 with Stealth, set at 'Amity Speedway' racetrack. It later took on attractions from the former 'Neptune's Beach' family area, Depth Charge, and Amity Beach outdoor water park. Amity and Amity Speedway are no longer physically connected, being divided by Big Easy Boulevard.

It also includes attractions from the former 'European Park' area, Flying Fish and Storm In A Teacup. Flying Fish was originally located beside Tidal Wave (where Stealth sits today) but was removed following construction of Stealth in 2005. It was reopened, in its present location near The Swarm, in 2007, due to popular demand. In 2011, the raft water ride Storm Surge was re-located from Cypress Gardens in Florida, USA, before it was rethemed into Legoland Florida. Storm Surge was built on the former site of the Octopus Garden children's area.

The Jungle

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The area's main attractions are Nemesis Inferno, a Bolliger & Mabillard inverted coaster set in a volcano, and Rumba Rapids a river rapids ride. The area was previously named 'Calypso Quay', the area now also includes part of the former 'Ranger County' family area, including Mr Monkey's Banana Ride, a small swinging ship ride, as well as shopfronts and restaurants from the former 'European Park' area.

The Dock Yard

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This area is primarily the plaza for Ghost Train, an indoor dark ride, and also contains The Walking Dead: The Ride an indoor rollercoaster. The area has no major themed features, other than buildings and scenery remaining from 'Octopus's Garden' (a since-closed children's area) which was later themed to Amity such as the Megastore, various buoys, and a carnival game that resembles a cargo ship.

Lost City

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The Lost City's theme is that of the ruins of a recently unearthed Atlantean civilisation, with Colossus as the main attraction (since 2002). The area first opened in 2001 with the Vortex and Zodiac rides as the only attractions. In 2003, this area was expanded further, with the additions of Quantum (a magic carpet ride) and Eclipse (a Ferris Wheel). Eclipse was removed after the 2004 season (being relocated to Chessington World of Adventures);[37] in its place, Rush, an S&S Screamin' Swing, was opened in the 2005 season. At the end of the 2005 season, Zodiac was removed, and replaced with a new HUSS Enterprise (relocated from Drayton Manor, where it operated under the name Cyclone, until it had to be closed down due to noise complaints). The replacement Zodiac opened (without fanfare) for the 2006 season.[23]

Old Town

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The main ride in this area is Saw - The Ride, a Gerstlauer Euro-Fighter with a 100 ft (30 m), 100-degree beyond vertical drop. The ride is themed to the Saw horror movie franchise and is set in a derelict warehouse/sawmill. A flat ride called Samurai was relocated from Chessington World of Adventures in 2004.

The area was previously named 'Canada Creek' and was the plaza for Logger's Leap, which opened in 1989 as one of the tallest log flumes in the world. It had a loose Canadian forest theme, although this has mostly been lost through redevelopments and resembles more of a Western town theme. The main attractions listed in the area sat outside the plaza. Logger's Leap ceased to operate after the 2015 season, and its permanent closure was confirmed in 2019.[15] It also used to have the main station for the Canada Creek Railway, a miniature railway which used to take guests to and from the (now closed) 'Thorpe Farm' area of the park, and around the backwoods of Canada Creek (after the closure of Thorpe Farm, it only traversed the backwoods of the Canada Creek area). The railway was closed during the 2008 season (and the track had to be partially rerouted due to the construction of SAW - The Ride), before being closed permanently at the end of the 2011 season.[33] In the years since its closure, the trains, station, and route used by this ride were utilized by several Fright Nights attractions.[39] The area was also home to the experience Black Mirror Labyrinth from 2021-2023.

Most of the rides in this area have been closed since the start of the 2022 season, due to construction work for Hyperia (opening 24 May).[32]

Fearless Valley

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The main ride in this area is Hyperia, the UK's tallest and fastest rollercoaster. Fearless Valley also includes a Burger King, Victorious Games, Hyporium gift shop, Cloud Nine Treats and toilets themed to Hyperia.

Swarm Island

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Swarm Island is the plaza area for The Swarm, a Bolliger & Mabillard wing coaster, opened in 2012. The area was built on land reclaimed from the surrounding lakes. The area is themed as the scene of an apocalyptic disaster/alien invasion from "The Swarm" which is intertwined with the area and ride station. Major theming pieces include a crashed plane, various damaged emergency vehicles like a helicopter and fire truck, a partially destroyed church (used as the ride station), and other destroyed structures. Many of the areas facilities are based within these structures, such as the ride station being housed in the church, the shop being housed in a shipping container, and the ride control room being based in an overturned police trailer wedged in the roof of the church.

Timeline of park areas

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Years areas opened
1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024
Fantasy Reef Port Atlantis Port and Basecamp
Neptune’s Kingdom Amity Beach Amity
Octopus Gardens
Central Park Amity Cove
Thorpe Farm
Canada Creek Old Town Old Town
Fearless Valley
Ranger County The Dock Yard
Lost City
Calypso Quay The Jungle
Angry Birds Land Big Easy Boulevard
Swarm Island

   Previous themed area

   Current themed area

Records held by the park

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  • Nemesis Inferno is the first inverted coaster to feature interlocking corkscrews (in the same layout).
  • Additionally, the world record for 'most naked people on a rollercoaster' was set on Nemesis Inferno in May 2004.[40]
  • The Swarm opened as Europe's tallest wing coaster and the first coaster in the world to feature the "wing over drop".
  • SAW - The Ride was marketed as having the world's steepest 'freefall' drop,[41] and as the world's first horror movie themed roller coaster. SAW - The Ride was not actually the steepest rollercoaster in the world when it opened in March 2009 - Steel Hawg at Indiana Beach had opened the previous year with a steeper 111° drop. However, whilst Steel Hawg's drop has brakes on it, SAW's drop is brakeless - hence it being marketed as having the steepest freefall drop. This particular accolade was taken by The Monster in 2016 (and, as of 2022, is held by Defiance).
  • Colossus held the world record for the most inversions on a rollercoaster when it opened in 2002, with 10 inversions. This record was matched in 2006 by "10 Inversion Coaster" (an exact clone of Colossus) and then beaten in 2013 by The Smiler at Alton Towers Resort, with 14 inversions.
  • Stealth was the UK's fastest roller coaster, launching from 0–80 mph (0–129 km/h) in 1.8 seconds (as of 2024 this record has been taken by Hyperia) Standing at 205.1 ft (62.5 m), it is also the UK's third tallest roller coaster (behind The Big One and Hyperia).
  • Tidal Wave opened as Europe's tallest water ride.
  • Hyperia is the tallest roller coaster in the UK at 236 ft (72 m), and the fastest roller coaster in the UK at 81 mph (130 km/h).[16] Hyperia also contains Europe's tallest inversion at 168 ft (51.2 m), and a world's first outer-banked turn inversion. Thorpe Park also claim that Hyperia has 14.8s of airtime being the UK's most weightless coaster.[42] However, this is debated as they have included a 3s stall in this statistic, which is widely regarded as hangtime and not airtime.
  • Stealth is the world's fastest accelerating rollercoaster[43] (0–80 mph (0–129 km/h) in 1.8 seconds) with the announced closure of Do-Dodonpa at Fuji-Q Highland on 13 March 2024.

Fright Nights

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Fright Nights,[44] formerly "Fright Nites" is Thorpe Park's annual Halloween event and also its largest Halloween event in the UK. It is an event that has been running at Thorpe Park since 2002, celebrating Halloween with the park staying open until late at night, as well as operating a range of temporary Halloween attractions. Roaming actors in costume or with make up can also be found around the park.[45] During Fright Nights, the park stays open until 9pm, with a range of "scare mazes" available for guests, who normally enter in groups of 8–10. "Face it Alone" has sometimes been available as an upcharge, where a guest enters unaccompanied and must sign a disclaimer before entering.[46]

In 2013, Fright Nights was relaunched with a horror movie theme, courtesy of a three-year contract with Lionsgate. All of the pre-existing Fright Nights attractions were removed with the exception of The Asylum and SAW: Alive to make way for new horror-film themed attractions.

In 2014, when the Thorpe Shark Hotel opened, Thorpe Park offered two overnight scare attractions, one of which involved a 'night terror' character appearing in guests' hotel rooms during the night. The other attraction, the 'Extra Cut', involved guests being 'kidnapped' from their hotel room during the night and chased throughout the park.[47][48]

In 2017 Fright Nights was reinvented with a Walking Dead theme. The addition of two Walking Dead attractions coincided with the season 8 premier of the show. SAW Alive, The Big Top and Platform 15 remained in operation from previous years, with Containment returning as an upcharge attraction.[49]

In 2020, restrictions put into place due to the COVID-19 Pandemic meant that only two mazes operated: Platform 15 and Roots of Evil, both of which took place primarily outdoors. This led to a wide selection of scare zones introduced for the first time to Fright Nights, with The Swarm: Invasion located on Swarm Island, Creek Freaks Unchained in Old Town, The Fearstival Arena in The Dockyard, The Howling of LycanThorpe High in Lost City (on the site near Zodiac and Rush typically used for a scare maze), and Terror at Amity High returning for its third year on the Stealth Plaza. The Crows were also added as roaming actors dressed as scarecrows, based in a few main locations but found anywhere around the park, including interacting with other scare zones.[50]

Fright Nights attraction history
Year Attractions (number of seasons)
2002 THE FREEZER
(3)
Freakshow 3D
(3)
         
2003
2004 Carnival of the Bizarre
(5)
2005 The Asylum
(9)
Hellgate
(6)
2006 Se7en
(6)
2007
2008 The Curse
(5)
2009  
2010 SAW: Alive
(9)
Dead End
(1)
2011 Experiment 10
(2)
 
2012 The Passing
(1)
2013 My Bloody Valentine
(3)
Cabin in the Woods
(4)
Blair Witch
(4)
2014 Studio 13
(1)
Extra Cut
(1)
2015 Containment
(5)
The Big Top
(3)
2016 Platform 15
(5)
2017 The Walking Dead:
Living Nightmare

(3)
The Walking Dead:
Sanctum

(1)
2018 The Walking Dead:
Do or Die

(2)
The Big Top: Showtime
(1)
Blair Witch
(2)
Terror at Amity High: High School SUCKS!
(3)
Screamplexx Cinema
(3)
Vulcan Peak
(1)
Dead Creek Woods
(1)
2019 Creek Freak Massacre
(1)
   
2020 The Swarm: Invasion
(2)
Roots of Evil
(1)
The Howling of LycanThorpe High
(1)
Creek Freaks Unchained [as a Scare Zone]
(2)
The Fearstival Arena
(1)
The Crows
(2)
2021 Platform 15: End of the Line
(1)
Creek Freak Massacre
(1)
Amity High vs LycanThorpe: LoveBITES!
(1)
Trailers
(4)
The Crows of Mawkin Meadow
(4)
Birthday Bash
(2)
Legacy
(2)
 
2022 Survival Games
(3)
The Terminal
(1)
Creek Freak Massacre: The Final Cut
(1)
Amity High vs LycanThorpe: Graduation SUCKS!
(1)
Creek Freaks Unchained [as a Roaming Team]
(1)
Death's Doors
(2)
 
2023 Creature Campus: Trouble's Brewing
(1)
Lucifer's Lair
(2)
Stitches
(2)
   
2024 Creature Campus: Looks Can Kill!
(1)
Deadbeat
(1)
   


  – Previous Fright Night attraction.   – Current Fright Night attraction.

Thorpe Shark Cabins

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Guests can stay over on-park at the 'Thorpe Shark Cabins', comprising 90 rooms converted from shipping containers with a link to facilities in the adjacent Dome. The accommodation takes its name from its shark head entrance feature built from recycled park signage.

The hotel initially opened in 2013 as 'The Crash Pad', run by external company Snoozebox. The temporary development was purchased by the park the following year and rebranded as the Thorpe Shark Hotel.[51]

Thorpe Park had originally been planning to build a permanent 250-bed hotel as far back as 2006. This would have been located on the opposite side of the lake, on the site of former excavation works, featuring a lakeside bar, health club and restaurant. Planning permission was granted in 2011.[52]

The development was pitched again following the installation of 'The Crash Pad' to "test market conditions". The park received planning permission to construct the permanent hotel in 2014, with construction planned to begin in 2016 and an opening in 2018. However, the hotel was never constructed and the Shark Hotel's planning permission was extended by 10 years instead.[53]

In 2023, new Swarm, Nemesis Inferno and Stealth themed rooms opened in the Thorpe Shark Cabins. They feature special theming in the room and unlimited fastrack on each rooms roller coaster on your 2nd day.[54]

In 2024, new Colossus and Hyperia themed rooms opened in the Thorpe Shark Cabins.

Operations and developments

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Thorpe Park has a maximum capacity of 15,000 guests.[55][56]

In 2010, the park outlined a 5-year development plan that outlined new rollercoasters for 2012, which was later realised in The Swarm. The plan outlined another rollercoaster scheduled for 2015 as well as a permanent lakeside hotel, both of which have not come to fruition. No application was ever submitted for the 2015 development and the earmarked site behind The Swarm remains undeveloped.[57]

On 26 November 2021, the park launched a public consultation website outlining a proposal for a brand new roller coaster.[58] Alongside this, leaflets were handed out to local residents, stating the proposal will 'involve the removal of existing old rides and replacement with a new roller coaster in the Old Town part of the resort'. The public consultation began on 10 December 2021, with plans detailing a 236-foot (72 m) tall steel hyper coaster codenamed "Project Exodus".[58]

An application for planning permission was submitted on 14 March 2022.[59] Objections were raised by Surrey Wildlife Trust, Natural England, and the Environment Agency; citing concerns regarding biodiversity impacts, pollution, and flood risks.[60] The concerns raised by Surrey Wildlife Trust and Natural England were addressed, leading to their objections subsequently being withdrawn.[61] On 5 October 2022, Runnymede Borough Council approved the application for "Project Exodus", but, due to the unresolved objection from the Environment Agency, the application had to be referred to the Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities for approval[62] (under the terms of The Town and Country Planning (Consultation) (England) Direction 2021).

On 1 November 2022, a letter sent to Runnymede Borough Council on behalf of the Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities stated that 'He is content that it should be determined by the local planning authority'.[63] Subsequently, Runnymede Borough Council granted planning permission for "Project Exodus" on 2 November 2022.[64][65]

Construction for the project began in January 2023,[66] with the manufacturer being confirmed as Mack Rides. On 17 July 2023, the first supports arrived for the coaster. In August 2023, Project Exodus was confirmed to be the UK's fastest roller coaster and the colour scheme of black, gold and white was confirmed.[67]

On 5 October 2023, the name for Project Exodus, Hyperia, was revealed and, on 6 March 2024, the track was completed.[68] The rollercoaster opened on 24 May 2024, but was closed the following day. It reopened on 12 June 2024,[69] but was temporarily closed again on 19 June following an incident four days earlier, in which riders were stuck on part of the ride for an hour.[70]

Transport

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There are no direct rail connections to Thorpe Park; the nearest railway station is Chertsey, 2 km away.

Thorpe Park is served by the 950 express bus, which runs from Staines railway station,[71] from which journeys from London Waterloo or Reading can be made. Other local bus routes that serve the park include routes 461 and 446.[72] There is also the seasonal 951 bus between Watford and Thorpe Park, operating once daily (arriving in the morning, departing in the evening) although there are two return journeys during Fright Nights.[73]

Incidents

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Theme Parks Portfolio". LXi REIT Plc. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
  2. ^ "Amusement and theme park attendance in UK 2020". Statista. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
  3. ^ a b "Thorpe Park History Timeline". Memories of Thorpe Park. Retrieved 27 October 2024.
  4. ^ "IWSF World Championship Historical Facts". International Waterski & Wakeboard Federation. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  5. ^ a b "Glossy Image – But It's Still A Gravel Pit". Surrey Herald. Surrey. 24 May 1979.
  6. ^ "Park of lakes", Staines and District Chronicle, 25 May 1979, p.21
  7. ^ "Park Plans Thrill Rides". Surrey Herald. 7 January 1982.
  8. ^ "Flying Fish". Thorpe Park. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  9. ^ "Thorpe Park – Theme Park James". themeparkjames.co.uk. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  10. ^ a b "Merlin conjures up leaseback deal". 17 July 2007 – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
  11. ^ Cho, David (6 March 2007). "Blackstone Buys Madame Tussauds Chain" – via www.washingtonpost.com.
  12. ^ "Tussauds firm bought in £1bn deal". BBC News. 5 March 2007. Retrieved 12 May 2010.
  13. ^ "Alton Towers sold in £622m deal". BBC News. 17 July 2007. Retrieved 12 May 2010.
  14. ^ "Thorpe Park – Coasterpedia – The Roller Coaster Wiki". coasterpedia.net.
  15. ^ a b "Thorpe Park Resort". Twitter. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  16. ^ a b "The Proposal | Thorpe Park Resort". Thorpe Park Consultation. Archived from the original on 27 July 2022. Retrieved 27 July 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  17. ^ "Glowing Transformation: Thorpe Park's Winter Glow-Up". Thorpe Park. Retrieved 26 October 2024.
  18. ^ a b c Chris (18 November 2023). "Big Easy Boulevard to replace Angry Birds Land at Thorpe Park Resort". Attraction Source. Retrieved 4 December 2023.
  19. ^ "Rebrand". Thorpe Park. Retrieved 4 December 2023.
  20. ^ "Hyperia Construction". Theme Park Guide. Retrieved 26 October 2024.
  21. ^ "Hyperia is Taking Flight…". 5 October 2023. Retrieved 5 October 2023.
  22. ^ "Stealth - Thorpe Park (Chertsey, Surrey, England, United Kingdom)". rcdb.com. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
  23. ^ a b "Zodiac, Thorpe Park". Theme Park James. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
  24. ^ "Pirates 4D, Thorpe Park". Theme Park James. Retrieved 4 December 2023.
  25. ^ "Time Voyagers, Thorpe Park". Theme Park James. Retrieved 4 December 2023.
  26. ^ "Angry Birds 4D Experience, Thorpe Park". Theme Park James. Retrieved 4 December 2023.
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  30. ^ Rodger, James (16 February 2024). "Thorpe Park announces two rides have shut permanently and fans 'not surprised'". Birmingham Live. Retrieved 19 February 2024. ...with the closed-down Slammer also set to be removed from the park.
  31. ^ Nightingale, Laura (21 February 2019). "Thorpe Park announces 'with heavy heart' permanent closure of Logger's Leap". SurreyLive. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  32. ^ a b "Project Exodus | Theme Park Guide". themeparkguide.co.uk. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  33. ^ a b c "Canada Creek Railway". Attraction Source. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
  34. ^ a b Weir, Luke (27 March 2022). "Thorpe Farm: Thorpe Park's beloved lost attraction". SurreyLive. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
  35. ^ "Thorpe Farm". Attraction Source. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
  36. ^ "Wet Wet Wet at Thorpe Park Reviews & Info". Theme Park Tourist. March 1998. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
  37. ^ a b "Eclipse, Thorpe Park". Theme Park James. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
  38. ^ Rodger, James (16 February 2024). "Thorpe Park announces two rides have shut permanently and fans 'not surprised'". Birmingham Live. Retrieved 19 February 2024. The doors to this twisted, sensory-defying maze closed at the end of our 2023 season
  39. ^ "Canada Creek Railway - Platform 15 - Thorpe Park". Canada Creek Railway - Platform 15 - Thorpe Park. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
  40. ^ "Naked rollercoaster record feat". 21 May 2004. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  41. ^ "You gotta roll with it". 13 March 2009. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
  42. ^ "Hyperia". Thorpe Park. Retrieved 16 May 2024.
  43. ^ "Fastest launch accelerations - Coasterpedia - The Roller Coaster and Flat Ride Wiki". coasterpedia.net. Retrieved 1 April 2024.
  44. ^ "FRIGHT NIGHTS at THORPE PARK Resort". www.thorpepark.com.
  45. ^ "Haunted Attractions UK – Thorpe Park Fright Nights... an EVILution!". Archived from the original on 26 December 2013. Retrieved 30 August 2007.
  46. ^ "What to expect from Face it Alone 2016 (my first ever.)". Thorpe Park Mania Forums.
  47. ^ "UK Theme Park Round-Up – October Review and November 2014 Preview". Theme Park Tourist. 2 November 2014. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
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  49. ^ Pearson, Michael; Peracha, Qasim (29 September 2017). "Thorpe Park Fright Nights 2017: See what happened when Get Surrey reporters braved The Walking Dead mazes". SurreyLive. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  50. ^ "FRIGHT NIGHTS FEARSTIVAL Announcement". Thorpe Park. Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  51. ^ Sim, Nick. "Thorpe Park names new hotel for 2014 as Thorpe Shark Hotel". Theme Park Tourist. Retrieved 18 April 2017.
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  53. ^ Total Thorpe Park. "Thorpe Park Hotel planning". Theme Park Tourist. Archived from the original on 7 May 2019. Retrieved 21 May 2019.
  54. ^ Nightingale, Laura (23 July 2023). "Thorpe Park opens Swarm, Nemesis and Stealth-themed hotel rooms". SurreyLive. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  55. ^ Crowds force closure of theme parkThe Guardian. 17 April 2006. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
  56. ^ Theme Parks Operation in ChertseyScoot. Retrieved 16 November 2021.
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  59. ^ Josh (14 March 2022). "Project Exodus Plans Submitted". Thorpe Park Mania. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
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  62. ^ "Government to decide on Thorpe Park rollercoaster". RideRater. 5 October 2022. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  63. ^ "Redevelopment of the "Old Town" area within Thorpe Park, Staines Road, Chertsey" (PDF). runnymede.gov.uk. 1 November 2022. p. 2. Retrieved 13 November 2022. The Secretary of State has decided not to call in this application. He is content that it should be determined by the local planning authority
  64. ^ Lewis (3 November 2022). "UK's tallest rollercoaster Project Exodus approved for Thorpe Park Resort". Attraction Source. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  65. ^ O'Brien, Christy (4 November 2022). "New Thorpe Park ride given the go-ahead: what it'll be like and when it could open". SurreyLive. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  66. ^ White, Steven (12 January 2023). "Thorpe Park's new Project Exodus ride edges closer to completion as first pictures emerge". Surrey Live. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
  67. ^ Graves, Kieran (23 August 2023). "Thorpe Park's new rollercoaster for 2024 will be UK's 'tallest and fastest'". Surrey Live. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
  68. ^ Maisner, Stuart; Harms, Adrian (8 March 2024). "New rollercoaster track completed at Thorpe Park". BBC News. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
  69. ^ Walker, Amy (11 June 2024). "Thorpe Park to reopen UK's tallest rollercoaster". BBC News. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
  70. ^ Sherratt, Zac (19 June 2024). "'Teething issues' force rollercoaster closure again". BBC News. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
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  72. ^ "Travel Directions & Information | Thorpe Park Resort". Thorpe Park. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  73. ^ "SULLIVAN BUSES - Route 951". www.sullivanbuses.com. Retrieved 4 December 2023.
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