So about a month ago I decided it was a good idea to take a little trip to Poland to go and take a look at Energylandia and Legendia. I booked a flight and a hostel and hired a car and last thursday I went off to Poland.
I booked a hostel at walking distance to Legendia, at the edge of Katowice's city center. I actually arrived to hours early and couldn't check in at the moment so I walked towards Legendia to take some foto's. I decided to follow the cable cart that goes alongside the park and take a ride back to the start. It ended up to be quite a walk at around 2.5 km long. The station at the other end is right next to Katowice's stadion, which looked quite impressive:
And I got great views over the surrounding park:
And ofcourse at the end I was able to get some nice shots of Lech Coaster and Tornado. The park was closed during the week though:
After that I checked in at the hostel. On Booking.com it was stated that they spoke English which really wasn't the case but after a while and a with a little help from Google translate I got everything arranged.
I planned to go to Energylandia the next day and I still had the whole afternoon so I went to check out the city which turned out to be really nice. It was quite modern actually. The center had mostly neo classic buildings but there were also these huge tenements which looked impressive:
Then there was the cultural center which holds museums, a concert hall and a sports venue. I especially liked the museum. It was built around this old industrial area with mining towers. I actually took some inspiration from this area for my coaster I'm currently working on:
The next day I drove to Energylandia. I decided to avoid the toll roads and see a bit of the countryside. It was about an hour's drive over 55 km.
I arrived at Energylandia just before 10 so I got to see their opening show. I thought it was really cheeky and geared more towards kids though.
I thought most people would run towards Hyperion when the gates opened so I cleverly decided to take a clockwise walk around the park and first went towards Speed. The first few rides I did were basically walk-on and it was not until Mayan Roller Coaster that I had to wait for a bit.
Anyway, Speed was a decent ride. The most impressive part of it is the drop. Because of its shallow angle you gradually take up speed and it takes quite long to get down. After that though, the ride I thought was a bit rattly. The splashdown was nice though.
Just up the path from the exit of Speed you get to Dragon Rollercoaster, the Vekoma inverted family coaster. To be honest, it is quite intense for a family ride. Especially after the first drop you get a good sustained part of positive g's. I'd classify this more as a transition between a family coaster and a thrill coaster tbh:
Then came one of my most anticipated rides of the trip: Formula. It did not disappoint. Some say it's a short ride but I didn't experience it that way. Maybe that's because in the Netherlands we have a lot of shorter coasters though.. It had a good mix of forces. Strong possitives in the curves and impressive ejector airtime on the hills. The corkscrews were quick and snappy. Overall a top class coaster imho.
And I got to take some nice shots from the storage shed:
After taking a ride on the flume ride between Formula and Mayan (which btw get's the people in the queue really wet but the people onride not so much) it was time for the SLC. Seeing this is the second to last SLC built I had quite high expectations. Unfortunatly it was still quite rough. Especially in the first inversions. I got to ride it front row. I rode Infusion at Blackpool in the middle. I'm not sure if the seat location has anything to do with it but I still think Infusion is a much better experience.
Boomerang was up next. It's nothing too special although it's really smooth:
Viking, I had learned from Shawn Sanbrooke's video on Themepark Worldwide was very rough. I took this knowledge and leaned forward into the restraints and that prevented any headbanging making the ride quite enjoyable.
Now it was finally time to take a ride on Hyperion. It had the longest queue for the day as expected though it was still only 30 minutes. It really is an awesome ride. The drop takes forever. The first camelback has really good sustained ejector airtime but besides a few pops on the smaller hills, the rest of the ride is mostly floater airtime. What I noticed most about the ride is how huge it actually is. Even the trains are huge, you could easily fit another row of seats between the current rows. It also lasts forever, it kinda feels like they untangled Taron next to a parking lot.
I also took a ride on the rest of the kiddy coasters to get the credits. There really are a lot of them, maybe a bit too much but I got them all done by 2:30pm. This left me some time to do some more of the water rides. Jungle Adventure, next to Speed, was a good Rapids, I got quite soaked on it and so was Atlantis, although that was quite tame.
Overall though, I thought the park was quite chaotic. I classify this as a theme park but there weren't any clearly themed areas. Everything was a bit mashed together. I also had trouble finding some of the entrances to the rides as they weren't on the main path. I think the park could improve on this.
There was also some construction going on in the fields behind Formula and Mayan. About 100m from the border of the current park. It looked like foundations of what could be a station and storage shed. Perhaps the RMC?