Friday, 28 April 2023 08:00

Rebuilding Nemesis at Alton Towers – The Return of an Icon

The eagerly-anticipated return of Nemesis at Alton Towers Resort, set to re-open in 2024, will feature a changed colour from white to black, with red veins snaking along its length.

Rebuilding Nemesis at Alton Towers – The Return of an Icon

The transformation will see the entire 250-tonne, 716-metre-long track replaced piece by piece over the coming months, with each track element travelling 4,000 miles from Ohio back to the Resort in Staffordshire.

Following the track arrival and as work on the site gets underway, fans will be able to watch the developments from a custom-built viewing platform, overlooking the construction area. Up to 30 people at a time can get a glimpse of what’s to come, ahead of the roller coaster returning next year.

Drone images taken by the Resort show how the installation is now underway, with the roller coasters final bend carefully placed into position. Over the coming weeks, each piece will be craned into its place by a specialist team of engineers – some of which who worked on the construction of the original ride in 1994.

Video released by the Resort also captured the moment a convoy of lorries arrived at the Resort with the first pieces of track, under Phalanx control.

The ride, situated in the Forbidden Valley area of the park, carries dangling thrill seekers around tangled steel as it corkscrews, spins and loops. Nemesis is, without a doubt, one of the most heart-pounding, exciting and exhilarating rides you will ever experience. It welcomes guests and tells them to ‘sit back, it’s fright time!’

Nemesis opened in 1994, costing £10m, and was the creation of legendary roller coaster designer, John Wardley. It was crowned Europe’s first inverted roller coaster and since then has welcomed numerous famous faces from around the world.

The original story told fans of the park how Nemesis had come from another dimension, a dimension beyond all imagination. Deep beneath the ground at Alton Towers Resort lived a strange being. Disturbed during maintenance, the monster that lay dormant was unleashed, wreaking havoc on the surrounding area. The Phalanx immediately launched their extreme security division to pin down the creature and disable it.

On November 6th 2022, thrill seekers took a last ride around the original track before it was theatrically taken over by The Phalanx and closed for investigation. When it re-opens in 2024, the iconic ride will return in sensational style, marking its 30th anniversary.

Since the closure, more than half a million fans have watched the Resort’s on-board footage on social media.

Bianca Sammut, Divisional Director at Alton Towers Resort, said:

“As Europe’s first ever inverted rollercoaster, Nemesis rightly holds legendary status among thrillseekers. At Alton Towers Resort we’re committed to providing visitors with stand-out attractions that are unmatched by anyone else.

Reaching this latest milestone in the transformation of Nemesis is a proud moment for everyone involved in the project. And for all thrillseekers out there it means the day we can take the wraps off our thrilliant revamp is edging ever closer.

Stay alert for more developments…”

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