Good point, especially if they want to build a 3rd runway. Would they have to put beacons on the top like Blackpool did with the Big One?There's one potential issue five miles to the north-east. Heathrow Airport.
I'd assume so. There's a reason why so many tall buildings have to have beacons on the top. It's especially prominent in London near City Airport, and on some buildings in central London which are on the flight path to Heathrow. There must be something where structures over a certain height have to have a beacon on them by law.Good point, especially if they want to build a 3rd runway. Would they have to put beacons on the top like Blackpool did with the Big One?
London City Airport is a special case because the planes that use it are generally smaller Bombardier/Embraer aircraft coming in at a much larger angle than usual 5.5 degrees instead of the usual 3 degrees to avoid the skyscrapers.I'd assume so. There's a reason why so many tall buildings have to have beacons on the top. It's especially prominent in London near City Airport, and on some buildings in central London which are on the flight path to Heathrow. There must be something where structures over a certain height have to have a beacon on them by law.
This is of course true. It's just one example I thought of.London City Airport is a special case because the planes that use it are generally smaller Bombardier/Embraer aircraft coming in at a much larger angle than usual 5.5 degrees instead of the usual 3 degrees to avoid the skyscrapers.
I know the US does because the Hollywood Tower of Terror was built lust under the minimum height as the designers felt a beacon would ruin the look of the building.I'd assume so. There's a reason why so many tall buildings have to have beacons on the top. It's especially prominent in London near City Airport, and on some buildings in central London which are on the flight path to Heathrow. There must be something where structures over a certain height have to have a beacon on them by law.
Loads of people blamed the Olympics though, Camelot said that's the reason why they closed permanently! Interesting to know about the Hyper Coaster but honestly I still think a GCI would fit at Thorpe very nicely!In all fairness, Swarm wasn't an initial success because of external factors such as the Olympics. The product itself is popular, reliable and the Brave it Backwards campaign in 2013 shows that the ride did captivate the interests of the public.
I mean this is the era in which Merlin's CEO is supposedly on record for saying "Alton Towers will never get a wooden coaster", and look what happened. If as Matt's book mentions that a B&M hyper is technically feasible at Thorpe Park, they could easily find a way to market a hyper coaster especially if they place the USP on the theme and experience of the ride rather than breaking records. Or hell even pull a Cedar Fair and make the USP true but very oddly specific, it still gives them a gimmick to market. If the park offer a solid product, the marketing team can always find ways to market as a USP (not the other way round). Word of Mouth marketing is very strong and is undoubtedly one of the reasons Wicker Man is so popular.
Especially with being near the centre of the Olympics and everything!Any plans / images in the book?
interesting about the olympics. I would have thought that would have boosted numbers
It's always interesting how often people say things like "remove this dark ride, and use the warehouse for a different dark ride!" - it should be remembered that these 'warehouses' are almost always specifically designed around the ride, suiting the requirements of the ride.Remove DBGT and use the warehouse for a large scale dark ride possibly using the Duel car system.
what do you guys think would have happened at Thorpe had the great fire of 2000 not happened?
Personally, I think that the park’s thrilling transition would likely have happened far more slowly, and possibly not to quite the same degree; I think the park would almost have become more like the Alton Towers of the South as opposed to the out-and-out thrill park they ended up becoming.
The question is will DBGT ever open again, i mean i hope it doesn't becuase it's novelty dropped off and it was extremely hit and miss but i doubt they'll bulldoze it completely!I'd quite happily bulldoze DBGT and start again TBH. A classic example of Merlin not thinking about the operational aspects of a ride and only thinking about marketing the thing.
I've long felt Thorpe's biggest issue is queue times, partially down to the over-abundance of FT, partially down to being stuck with rides with mediocre throughput (Saw, Colossus) and partially due to rubbish operations on Inferno (seriously, why is that thing always so badly operated these days?). If they maxed-out capacities on everything they already have they'd be half-way there, but the small cars on Saw and terrible trains/station layout on Colossus are always going to limit what they can get out of them
I suspect that, prior to the bag store closing, Swarm would generally be the highest throughput coaster in the park by a considerable margin. I'm not sure how much of impact the loss of baggage store has made as I don't visit that often anymore but I'd guess that as people just dump their stuff between the loading bays it's probably far less significant than on Thirteen/Smiler. A well-run B&M hyper would have had higher throughput, but swapping out Swarm for a hyper wouldn't have solved the underlying problems in the rest of the park, though I guess if it had been a bigger hit with the public it could have drawn more people away from the other rides.