Europe in the Air

Europe in the Air
Busch Gardens Williamsburg
StatusOperating
Opening dateMarch 26, 2010
ReplacedCorkscrew Hill
General statistics
Attraction type Simulator ride
Manufacturer Reflectone
Quick Queue available

Europe in the Air is a motion simulator ride located at Busch Gardens Williamsburg, a theme park in Williamsburg, Virginia. The attraction is similar in both ride and production to that of Disney's Soarin' Over California and Star Tours. Because of the theming of the park, Europe in the Air simulates flight over Europe's most notable icons. The park states the picture is "eight times clearer than HD." Other features, such as fans, are used for a more realistic journey. Europe in the Air replaced the Corkscrew Hill ride for the 2010 season. It is sponsored by Aer Lingus but closed on June 30, 2013 for the season.

History

In 2009, it was announced that the Corkscrew Hill ride would retire to make way for Europe in the Air. The ride was originally manufactured by the now-defunct Reflectone company.[1]

Europe in the Air closed on June 30, 2013, for the rest of the 2013 season.[2] It was later reopened for the 2014 season.

Experience

Queue

The queue line begins in a castle-like structure (in which a "hand" used to hold Corkscrew Hill's logo) with the ride's name on a bill board, saying "Europe in the Air: A High-Flying Adventure." The line wraps around ponds, through dark primitive tunnels and (oddly) enter a high-tech room showing maps of the countries and landmarks you are about to "fly" over. Next, guests enter a room with a pre-show, showing an "advertisement" and summary of Europe in the Air, a fictional airline. After that, another preshow in the next room requires riders to stand in front of the row of your choice. This time the pre-show is more about safety than humor. After this, guests enter the ride.

Pre-shows

Ride

The ride vehicle is a large box-like seating area, occupied by rows of seats. In front is the screen, as well as some fans. When the ride begins, the fans start, and the boarding platforms are raised and taken away. After "taking off" from Ireland, the ride "flies" upward, using clouds as the screen wipe. The ride "flies" over Europe's landmarks to laid-back music and eventually "lands" in Ireland again. The loading and unloading platform drop back down, and guests exit through a hallway, showing pictures of the previously seen sights along with advertisements from Aer Lingus which were ended in 2011. The hallway now contains the images minus all traces of Aer Lingus. This hallway is also the Quick Queue entrance.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, November 19, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.