Ghost Train (Thorpe Park)

Ghost Train, previously Derren Brown's Ghost Train: Rise of the Demon, is a dark ride at Thorpe Park in Surrey, England. The attraction incorporates motion simulation and illusion. It is set in a themed derelict Victorian railway depot. It first opened in July 2016,[1] then reopened as Derren Brown's Ghost Train: Rise Of The Demon in March 2017.[2] On the 2nd May 2023, it was announced on all THORPE PARK social media channels[3] that the reimagined Ghost Train would reopen on the 26th May 2023.[4]

Ghost Train
Exterior of the ride
Thorpe Park
AreaThe Dock Yard
StatusClosed
Cost£13 million (reported)
Soft opening date1 July 2016 (2016-07-01)
Opening date8 July 2016 (2016-07-08)
ReplacedDerren Brown's Ghost Train: Rise of The Demon
Ride statistics
Attraction typeDark ride
Live action
DesignerMerlin Magic Making
ThemeVictorian
London Underground
Ghost train
MusicIMAscore
Site area2,306 m2 (24,820 sq ft)
Capacity750 riders per hour
Vehicle typeNorth Eastern Railway coach (exterior)
London Underground 1995 Stock carriage (interior)
Vehicles3
Riders per vehicle58
Rows2
Riders per row29
Participants per groupMax 58
Duration13–15 minutes
Height restriction140 cm (4 ft 7 in)
Fastrack available
Disabled access Wheelchair accessible

History

Derren Brown's Ghost Train was first teased on 8 July 2015 after reportedly three years in planning. The project name was referred to as 'WC16'.[5]

Merlin Magic Making, the development division of Merlin Entertainments, designed the attraction in collaboration with British mentalist Derren Brown and his team. The main experience is a simulator dark ride built by Simworx, originally with on-board virtual reality (produced by Figment Productions). Severn Lamb and Intamin engineered the complex transit system.

The project altogether was reported in the Financial Times as having a cost of £13 million.[6]

After the 2022 season, the virtual reality on the ride and association with Derren Brown was removed.

Opening

In anticipation of the new attraction, Thorpe Park began a "Get in for a Bob" promotion, where 1871 people would be able to purchase a ticket into the resort for the modern-day equivalent of a shilling in Victorian times, which equals 5 pence. The website was published earlier than the scheduled time which resulted in many being unable to get tickets.[7] The resort offered that those who registered their name before the website closed would be entered into a raffle, where a further 4,000 12 pence tickets would be allocated at random.[8]

The attraction was originally set to open on 6 May 2016, as announced on their social networks. However one week before the attraction was set to open, the resort announced the attraction would not be ready due to "some illusions not working as anticipated".[9]

See also

  • HTC Vive, the VR headsets the ride formerly used.

References

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