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Nemesis Reborn
Previously known as Nemesis (1994-2024)
Ride entrance and first corkscrew
Alton Towers
LocationAlton Towers
Park sectionForbidden Valley
Coordinates52°59′13″N 1°52′58″W / 52.98694°N 1.88278°W / 52.98694; -1.88278
StatusOperating
Soft opening date16 March 1994 (1994-03-16)[1]
Opening date19 March 1994 (1994-03-19)
Cost£10 million
General statistics
TypeSteel – Inverted
ManufacturerBolliger & Mabillard
DesignerWerner Stengel
ModelInverted Coaster – Custom
Track layoutTerrain
Lift/launch systemChain lift hill
Height13 m (42.7 ft)
Drop31.7 m (104 ft)
Length716 m (2,349 ft)
Speed81 km/h (50 mph)
Inversions4
Duration1:20
Capacity1200 riders per hour
G-force3.5[2]
Height restriction140 cm (4 ft 7 in)
Trains2 trains with 8 cars. Riders are arranged 4 across in a single row for a total of 32 riders per train.
WebsiteOfficial website
Slogan"Sit back, it’s fright time!" & "Back with a vengeance"
Fastrack available
Nemesis Reborn at RCDB

Nemesis Reborn, previously Nemesis, is an inverted roller coaster located at the Alton Towers theme park in Staffordshire, England. Manufactured by Bolliger & Mabillard (B&M), the ride was designed by Werner Stengel, from a concept by park developer John Wardley. It opened in the Forbidden Valley (formerly Thunder Valley) area of the park on 19 March 1994.

The 716-metre-long (2,349 ft) ride stands 13 metres (42.7 ft) tall and features a top speed of 81 km/h (50 mph). The four-inversion roller coaster was one of the first B&M rides to be installed outside of the United States and the first in Europe as an independent company. For the 2023 season, the ride was closed for a major refurbishment and retracking with significant overhaul of its theme. It reopened on 16 March 2024 as Nemesis Reborn.[3]

History[edit]

Development history[edit]

In 1990, Alton Towers added the Thunder Looper roller coaster; the addition was only temporary due to planning restrictions imposed on its installation.[4][5] The park began planning for a new roller coaster on unused land adjacent to Thunder Looper.[6] They desired a roller coaster that was big, different, and exciting. But they were constrained by the tree-level height limit imposed on the park.[7]

One of Nemesis' trains exiting the first corkscrew (2006)

Alton Towers approached Arrow Dynamics for the new roller coaster. The Utah-based company was working on a prototype of a pipeline roller coaster, similar to TOGO's Ultratwister design.[7] John Wardley proposed the concept for a ride themed as a secret military weapon, codenamed "Secret Weapon".[6] Due to the design of the ride and the height restriction imposed on the park, the Secret Weapon would only have a track length of 300 metres (980 ft). A year later, a revised layout was drawn up, dubbed "Secret Weapon 2". Rock blasting was used to excavate space for the planned ride.[7] However, the Arrow pipeline project was cancelled when Wardley rode the prototype, describing how it was "very slow (and rather boring), looked cumbersome, and was very energy inefficient". The park began to look for an alternative.[6][7]

Tussauds became aware of a new roller coaster model being built by Bolliger & Mabillard at Six Flags Great America and entered into discussions with Six Flags, who agreed to privately disclose information about the new ride.[7] Jim Wintrode, the general manager of Six Flags Great America at the time, proposed the concept of an inverted roller coaster that featured inversions and worked with Bolliger & Mabillard to develop Batman: The Ride.[8][9] Tussauds directors rode Batman: The Ride prior to its May 1992 opening and wanted to add a similar ride to Alton Towers.[7][10]

The inverted roller coaster, dubbed "Secret Weapon 3", was planned throughout 1992. Wardley and Nick Varney, marketing director of Alton Towers, came up with the theme for "Nemesis" as an alien creature excavated from the ground.[7] According to Wardley, the ride's name was conceived one evening after himself and Nick Varney drank a bottle of Southern Comfort.[11] The ride's layout was designed by Werner Stengel. Tussauds collaborated with a landscape architect to design the excavated area and create a ride that could be exciting for both riders and non-riders – the final inversion was built at the eye level of an observer, and the queue winds all the way around the track.[2][7]

Operational history[edit]

The £10 million Nemesis officially opened to the public on 19 March 1994, following a soft opening three days prior.[2][1] It opened as one of the first Bolliger & Mabillard rides to be installed outside of the United States, along with Diavlo at Himeji Central Park, Japan, which opened four months later.[12]

In August 2004, Nemesis gained the Guinness World Record for the "Most Naked People on a Rollercoaster". The ride set the record at 32 riders – the number of seats on a single Nemesis train.[13] It took the record from Thorpe Park's Nemesis Inferno roller coaster which set the record at 28 just three months prior.[14][15] The ride lost the record in 2010 when 40 naked riders boarded Green Scream Rollercoaster at Adventure Island.[16]

In 2009, Alton Towers received several complaints from nearby residents regarding increased noise levels emitted from the ride. New wheels had to be installed on the two trains before the ride returned to normal operation. [17]

Retracking[edit]

Sign announcing the closure of Nemesis in October 2022

In January 2022, Alton Towers proposed retracking a majority of the roller coaster for maintenance reasons, including replacing 89 of the 117 support columns.[18] Nemesis closed for the refurbishment on 6 November 2022,[19] and reopened on 16 March 2024.[20]

In April 2023, Alton Towers revealed the new Nemesis track, which is black with red veins painted along the side.[21] During the refurbishment, Alton Towers built an observation platform next to Nemesis: Sub-Terra allowing up to 30 park guests at a time to view the construction taking place.[22] In September 2023, the park showcased the new red and black colour scheme of the trains.[23]

A new promotional video was released on 3 November 2023 alluding to the backstory of the refurbished ride.[24] On 8 January 2024, Alton Towers revealed that the coaster would be renamed Nemesis Reborn, and the opening date of 16 March was revealed on 21 February 2024.[25][26]

Characteristics[edit]

The eye, pictured in 2024.

Nemesis Reborn stands 13 metres (42.7 ft) tall, but due to the modified terrain, features a drop height of 31.7 metres (104 ft). Its track length is 716 metres (2,349 ft), and riders reach a maximum speed of 81 km/h (50 mph). The four inversions include two corkscrews, a zero-g roll, and a vertical loop.[2] Riders experience approximately 3.5 times the force of gravity on the 1-minute, 20-second ride.[2][1] Nemesis Reborn operates with two steel and fiberglass trains, each containing eight cars. Each car seats four riders in a single row for a total of 32 riders per train.[2]

Ride experience[edit]

A train travelling the stall turn (2003)

While operating as Nemesis, riders entering the station would choose between the standard queue or front row, the latter of which added significant queuing time, and has been removed for Nemesis Reborn. Riders are batched into rows of 4. Once the train is ready for dispatch, the floor beneath it is lowered prior to the train departing the station. When it does, the train makes a 45-degree, right-hand turn toward the lift hill. Upon reaching the top of the 13-metre (43 ft) hill, the train makes a small dip and a 180-degree turn to the left, followed by a small drop into a right-handed corkscrew. The on-ride photo is taken just before the drop into the corkscrew

The train then navigates a right-handed, 270-degree downward helix, which features 90-degree banking. This leads into an elevating second inversion, a zero-g roll, where riders experience a feeling of weightlessness in an air time moment. A 180-degree right-handed turn follows, sending riders into the third inversion, a vertical loop. The train then makes a left-turning stall maneuver into a second corkscrew. In the finale, the train enters an underground tunnel and makes another 180-degree turn into the brake run, before returning to the station.[2][27]

Theme[edit]

Nemesis was originally themed as an excavation site in which a dormant, alien creature has been discovered. The ride and the surrounding area was decorated with post-apocalyptic, scrapyard features. The station building was designed as the alien creature body. At the entrance to Forbidden Valley was an old roadheader partly encased in alien flesh. The waterfalls beneath the coaster were also initially dyed red to resemble blood.[28]

In the 2024 redesign, the roadheader was replaced with a black helicopter and helipad. All the structures around the area were also repainted in solid black, with added tentacles.

Around the time of its original launch, guests could purchase a souvenir audio narration on CD or cassette, narrated by Tom Baker, known as the 'Nemesis Legend'. This described Nemesis as a mysterious alien creature from another dimension, found buried underground during excavation work at Alton Towers. [29] Upon its discovery, steel was used to pin the creature down, becoming the steel that forms the coaster track today. In 1995, a limited run comic book was produced further imagining an extended story based on the ride.

The opening of Nemesis Sub-Terra in 2012 introduced the 'Phalanx' as a fictional organisation brought in to control Nemesis, taking name from an organisation mentioned in the 1995 Nemesis comic.[30] In Nemesis Sub-Terra, the Phalanx find an egg underground belonging to the Nemesis alien, which is being housed in their facility P-A1X. A large nest containing multiple eggs is later revealed to be in a cavern directly beneath the facility.

In the lead up to Nemesis Reborn, Alton Towers released several promotional videos beginning on 6 November 2022, when Alton Towers held its annual Fireworks Spectacular event. At the end of the show, a video was played that featured a Phalanx spokesman announcing the closure of Nemesis, confirming the start of an investigation. A promotional video released in April 2023 depicted surveillance footage from what appears to be a Phalanx testing facility, in which workers are examining the new Nemesis track.[31] In November of that year, a further promotional video depicted scientists extracting DNA from a Nemesis egg before they are attacked and lose control, signaling the upcoming return of the Nemesis roller coaster.[32]

The redesigned attraction reopened in March 2024, now featuring a re-awakened Nemesis with the Phalanx theme introduced to the area, with the creature creating chaos in the Phalanx research facility.

Reception and influence[edit]

Prior to its 2023 refurbishment, Nemesis was positively received by enthusiasts and the attraction industry,[33] and consistently ranks in Amusement Today's annual Golden Ticket Awards among best steel coasters.[34] It is also one of only seven roller coasters to appear in the top 50 every year since the award's inception in 1998, ranking tenth in its debut and peaking seventh in 2003.[35][36] In a poll conducted by the Los Angeles Times, Nemesis received 37.93% of the vote for title of best roller coaster in England, while Nemesis Inferno received 0.32%.[37] In addition, over 50 million guests have ridden the roller coaster since its opening in 1994.[38]

Golden Ticket Awards: Top steel Roller Coasters
Year 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2021 2022 2023
Ranking 10[35] 13[39] 14[40] 19[41] 18[42] 7[36] 17[43] 16[44] 16[45] 14[46] 13[47] 20[48] 18[49] 12[50] 16[51] 20[52] 21[53] 9[54] 11[55] 20[56] 20[57] 16[58] 32[59] 31[60] 35[61]

Spin-off rides[edit]

Two additional rides with the Nemesis brand were later added at Merlin theme parks. The first was Nemesis Inferno at Thorpe Park, another inverted coaster from B&M that opened in 2003.[62] In 2012, Alton Towers opened another ride with a related theme, Nemesis: Sub-Terra.[63] The drop tower from ABC Rides closed in 2015 and later reopened in 2023 following an eight-year hiatus.[22]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Nemesis". Alton Towers. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Marden, Duane. "Nemesis  (Alton Towers)". Roller Coaster DataBase.
  3. ^ Lewis (21 February 2024). "Nemesis Reborn to open from 16th March at Alton Towers Resort". TowersTimes. Retrieved 16 March 2024.
  4. ^ Ralph, Owen (9 August 2010). "John Wardley". Park World Magazine. Archived from the original on 30 December 2013. Retrieved 24 August 2013.
  5. ^ Marden, Duane. "Thunderlooper  (Alton Towers)". Roller Coaster DataBase.
  6. ^ a b c "John Wardley Looks Back" (PDF). First Drop: 13. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 March 2012. Retrieved 24 August 2013.
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  9. ^ O'Brien, Tim (24 March 2003). "In my office: Jim Wintrode". Amusement Business. 115 (12).
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External links[edit]

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