Mystic (roller coaster)
Mystic is a steel roller coaster located at Walibi Rhône-Alpes in Les Avenières, France. The coaster marked the park's 40th anniversary as well as a headlining part of a decade-long, €25 million investment plan. The coaster was manufactured by Gerstlauer and traverses a total of track both forwards and backwards, at a top speed of.
History
During the IAAPA Expo 2017 in November 2017, Walibi owner Compagnie des Alpes and German manufacturer Gerstlauer signed off on a new upcoming coaster project. On December 8, 2017, Compaigne des Alpes and Walibi announced the addition of a yet-to-be-named coaster to celebrate the park's 40th anniversary in 2019, with an animated rendering showing off the full layout of the attraction. The coaster would be incorporated into a new area, Festival City, being built in the southwest corner of the park, where three new Zamperla rides were scheduled to debut in 2018. It would also contribute towards a 10-year, €25 million investment plan into the park, which had been kicked off in 2016 with the Gravity Group wooden coaster Timber.Construction and development work started in and around September 3, 2018, and the park's Bamba and QWUADS were removed to accommodate such. In December 2018, the park began drilling footers, and following consistent releases of concept artwork and ride animations, the name was confirmed to be Mystic on December 24, 2018.
Track and supports began arriving in January 2019, and the coaster was built at a speedy pace throughout the winter and spring. The ride's pair of trains arrived at the park on April 12, 2019, and testing began later that month. After soft-opening on May 25, Mystic had its official grand opening on May 30, 2019.
Characteristics
Statistics
Mystic has a physical track length of, a max height of, and a top speed of. Due to the backwards section of the ride, which is traversed twice, riders will travel through an advertised of track. Mystic features a vertical Lift hill and three inversions; a Zero-G Roll, a Dive Loop, and a twisted rollback spike. The latter became one of the world's first and only spike elements on a shuttle coaster to end upside-down; it was first performed on Cobra at Conny-Land in Switzerland with its "scorpion tail" element.Mystic is serviced by two trains. Each one is made up of three cars with a single four-person row each, allowing for 12 riders per train. One will load in the station while the other traverses the layout. They re-enter the station via a turntable on the switch-track/brake run.