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DESTINATIONS EUROPA-PARK GERMANY RIGHT: Hotel Colosseo


FAR RIGHT: Arthur ride, Minimoys Kingdom


NEW


WATER PARK


With its first


foundation stone officially laid just a fortnight ago, the countdown to the opening of Rulantica – a vast new water world – has begun. Set a five-minute ride from the main park, the site is as big as 63 football pitches and £150 million has already been invested in preparing the infrastructure. The major


venture is based around a Nordic ‘Atlantis’, a


mythical world deep under the ocean. Rulantica will be home to 25 attractions, including 17 spectacular


water slides, and Germany’s largest indoor wave pool.


w WORLD AT ONE Europa-Park’s selling point is that visitors can explore all of Europe in one day, with 15 carefully designed ‘countries’ to explore. A great scene-setter is the


Voletarium, described as the continent’s largest flying theatre. The slick attraction opened this year with an immersive experience that starts in the queue – a clever distraction from the long wait during peak times. After snaking through a magical entrance, where Harry Potter meets Around the World in 80 Days, a short film introduces you to the pioneering aviators and inventors, the Eulenstein brothers, before 140 passengers are strapped into the chairlift-style flying machine to swoop and soar through the skies above Europe. Beamed on to epic 21-metre-wide


screens, special effects like wind, water and the scent of forests add another level of believability to the spectacular ride. (As do the slightly terrifying plunges towards the ocean.) White-knuckle ride fans will


head straight to the terrifying rollercoasters, which include the Wodan-Timbercoaster. The ride creates a sinister-looking backdrop in the Iceland-themed area, and at 1,050 metres long and 40 metres high, reaches speeds of over 60mph and a vertical acceleration of up to 3.5G.


w FAMILY TIME Europa-Park is definitely geared more towards the family market, with many gentler rides on offer. There are also 23 hours of shows a day to choose


66 travelweekly.co.uk 28 September 2017


You’re whisked into the Minimoys’ fantasy world of colossal ladybugs, huge blades of grass and giant frogs


from, including themed ice shows. Like Disney, the park also has its own cute small mammal as mascot. Ed Euromaus busts some serious moves during the joyful parade that takes place at 2pm every day through the centre of the park. The Arthur ride in the Minimoys Kingdom, reached via Grimm’s Enchanted Forest, is a definite highlight and certainly delighted this big kid at heart. It’s based on the hit English-language French animation about a boy called Arthur who discovers a land of creatures no larger than a tooth in his garden. The film’s director, Luc Besson, collaborated with the designers, and the result is slick and seamless. You’re whisked into the Minimoys’


fantasy world to a land of colossal ladybugs, huge blades of grass towering like skyscrapers and giant frogs croaking at ear-rattling decibels, and you’re guaranteed to emerge into the real world with a silly grin on your face. However, at the risk of sounding Grinch-like, some older attractions are beginning to show their age. Pirates in Batavia, a slow boat ride around


various time-worn dioramas, offers a kitsch charm for visitors of a certain vintage, though the Apple generation just won’t ‘get’ it. But make no mistake: the ambitious Mack dynasty is entirely serious when it comes to the fun business. With a new water adventure world set to open in 2019, this company is moving forward faster than the wheels on its founder’s first stagecoaches. Book it: Fred Holidays offers a two-night break during October half-term with two-day park passes, Gatwick flights to Basel, transfers, and a four-bed room in the Castillo Alcazar on a B&B basis, from £1,809 in total for two adults and two children under 12. fredholidays.co.uk


Where to stay


There are five themed hotels, with a sixth, Kronasar, set to open inside Rulantica. They include the Spanish villa-style Hotel El Andaluz and the New England-themed Hotel Bell Rock. Families on a budget can opt for the Europa Park Camp Resort and stay in covered wagons or tepee tents. The park also boasts a two-


Michelin-starred restaurant, the Ammolite, but the Loop Restaurant is huge fun and shouldn’t be missed. Here, food and drink seemingly arrives from the sky, whizzed to tables by a Spaghetti Junction-style network of metal looping tracks. Now that’s what you call fast food.


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