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Bobbejaanland

Coordinates: 51°12′04″N 4°54′18″E / 51.20111°N 4.90500°E / 51.20111; 4.90500
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Bobbejaanland, 1988
Bobbejaan and Josée Schoepen, ca. 1962
Bobbejaanland, 1973

Bobbejaanland is a theme park in Lichtaart, Belgium founded by Bobbejaan Schoepen, a Flemish singer, guitarist, and entertainer who enjoyed international popularity in the fifties and early sixties. In 1959 he bought a 30 hectare marsh, had it drained and built a 1000 capacity venue that opened in December 1961 as Bobbejaanland. This developed into an amusement park and remained in his possession until he sold it in 2004.

History

For its first decade after opening the park centered on water attractions and performance spaces. Numerous variety artists from the Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany appeared there. Following the advice of Phantasialand owner Gottlieb Löffelhard, Bobbejaanland evolved from 1975 onwards into a theme park, with rides becoming more important than music shows. It grew to fifty attractions with four hundred employees and received visitors from the Benelux countries, France, and Germany. As an independent family concern, it also supported educational and cultural projects. By the end of the seventies, Bob's wife José (a former opera singer and model) opened a museum with works of art from the Hopi and Navajo cultures, forming an extensive private collection of Native American art.

From the 1990s, three of his five children worked for the park. It added a 70 meter high windmill that provides the region with energy, and an adjoining museum of alternative energy generation.

Attractions

Lift and 97 degree first drop of Gerstlauer Euro-Fighter Typhoon at Bobbejaanland
Air Race, Bobbejaanland, 1988

Bobbejaanland contains about 50 attractions, such as the Waterslide (1980), the Giant wheel (1976), Indiana River (indoor waterslide, 1991), the Revolution (a dark Rollercoaster, 1989), the Speedy Bob (roller coaster, 1998), the Air Race (suspended roller coaster, 1987, now named Dreamcatcher), the longest junior roller coaster in the world, 'Okidoki' (i.e. 'that's all right', 2003/04), and the world's second Gerstlauer Euro-Fighter roller coaster, "Typhoon" (2003/04), with a drop angle of over 97°(a roller coaster with a fourfold loop and a free fall) and a Splash Battle, "Banana Battle", (2007) made by Preston & Barbieri. The giant Sledgehammer (a Giant Frisbee) reaches a speed of 110 km/h). In 1995 'Kinderland' (English: Kids' Country) was opened as an area for young children.

In 1979 Bobbejaanland opened the Looping Star roller coaster (Schwarzkopf GmbH). Passengers were held in the vehicle by centrifugal force when it looped the loop rather than relying on a physical restraint such as bar or brace.[1] The coaster was dismantled in 2003.

Because Bobbejaan Schoepen was primarily a folk and country singer, the park is still partly themed as a western village (for example the El Rio White Water Rapids and the El Paso Dark ride). In the Star Theater, Las Vegas style shows are performed. Bobbejaan bought Zorro's horse from stuntman Casey Tibbs, but the animal was accidentally electrocuted by an exposed cable. He also acquired an ornate white Pontiac Nudie mobile decorated with American coins.

Changes

In the winter of 2003 the park invested 12 million dollars in two new rides named the Typhoon and the Sledge Hammer. In a 2004 survey of 13 European amusement parks by consumer’s organisation Test-Aankoop Bobbejaanland was rated second after Phantasialand.[2]

In the early 2000s the founder was diagnosed with cancer and he sold Bobbejaanland to the Spanish-American Parques Reunidos group in April 2004.

References

  1. ^ Looping Star Bobbejaanland
  2. ^ Test-Aankoop magazine 477, June 2004

Sources

51°12′04″N 4°54′18″E / 51.20111°N 4.90500°E / 51.20111; 4.90500