Avalanche (Blackpool Pleasure Beach)

Avalanche is a steel bobsled roller coaster at Blackpool Pleasure Beach in Blackpool, England. It is the first, and as of 2020 the only,[1] bobsled roller coaster in the United Kingdom. It was designed for the park by Mack of Germany in 1988.

Avalanche
Avalanche, Pleasure Beach
Blackpool Pleasure Beach
LocationBlackpool Pleasure Beach
Coordinates53°47′24″N 3°03′21″W
StatusOperating
Opening date22 June 1988
Cost£2,500,000
General statistics
TypeSteel Bobsled
ManufacturerMack Rides
ModelBobsleigh
Lift/launch systemChain Lift
Height59 ft (18 m)
Length1,161 ft (354 m)
Speed45 mph (72 km/h)
Inversions0
Duration1:22
Height restriction44 in (112 cm)
Trains3 trains with 7 cars. Riders are arranged 2 across in 2 rows for a total of 28 riders per train.
Avalanche at RCDB
Pictures of Avalanche at RCDB

The ride uses three trains, each consisting of seven cars. Each car can hold two riders, one behind the other.

History

Avalanche opened on 22 June 1988 and was the first bobsled-type roller coaster to be constructed in the United Kingdom. It was the third bobsled coaster built by Mack Rides, who were in competition with Intamin, the only other company who designed steel bobsled coasters. The ride was to be themed around an Alpine bobsled course, and the station was built to reflect this.

The ride was officially opened by British ski-jumper Eddie "The Eagle" Edwards and the British bobsleigh team.[2]

The ride

Avalanche starts by passing through the storage room of the trains, then out of the building and onto the lift hill, so far the ride follows a normal ride track, at the top of the lift hill, the ride is released onto the main downhill track, which the ride is not physically held onto, it travels through various bobsled track style curves, picking up speed, before reaching the lowest curve and curving back up again, it then flattens out and travels into the first brake run, it then releases and the train travels around a bend and onto the second brake run, before being released again to travel into the station. The two brake runs are designed for when the roller coaster operates in full capacity, with all three trains running, so that the two trains returning to the station can wait on the brakes while the train in the station loads and unloads.

The ride has 1,160 feet (350 m) of track and the cars reach a maximum speed of around 50 mph. There is a height restriction of 122 cm (4 ft 0 in) for riders.[1]

Theming

Avalanche is themed around an Alpine bobsled track, the station building was built to look like an Alpine village lodge. The loading platform room is decorated with emblems of different Swiss regions and various pictures of famous Bobsled teams, there is a predominant picture of the British Bobsleigh team of the Calgary Winter Olympics, 1988 which sits alongside a plaque commemorating the ride's opening by Eddie "The Eagle" Edwards. Traditional Swiss music plays in the station and outside the station building. The trains themselves are painted in the same colours as the 1988 British Bobsled team, and a bobsleigh used by the Great British team is displayed in the station building.[2] The various curves of the track are given names of real turns on professional Bobsleigh tracks, such as "The Wall" and "The Snake", although the turns on the ride itself are not actually based on real bobsled turns.

Incidents

  • In 1994, six people were taken to hospital after the train stopped "brusquely" on the block section outside of the station.[3]
  • In 1997, the train jumped on the brakes, causing it to crash into itself. One boy was taken to hospital with bruised ribs. This incident was shown on the BBC TV documentary about Blackpool Pleasure Beach in 1998.[4]

Media

Avalanche appears in the video game RollerCoaster Tycoon Deluxe in the Blackpool Pleasure Beach scenario.

References

  1. "Avalanche". Blackpool Pleasure Beach. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  2. "Olympic fever hits the Fylde". Blackpool Gazette. Archived from the original on 25 October 2014. Retrieved 26 February 2010.
  3. "Ten hurt in Blackpool funfair ride accident". The Independent. 30 August 1994.
  4. "Episode 1". Pleasure Beach. 1998. BBC One.
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