Legoland opens roller coaster designed by Dutch theme park fan
In March 2018, Legoland Billund opened Flying Eagle to visitors. The Zierer family coaster had been designed by Romesh Popelier, who was present for the first rides.
More context
On 25 March 2018, Looopings reported that Flying Eagle had officially opened at Legoland Billund. That gave Romesh Popelier's unusual design story its public payoff. The Dutch theme park fan, now 25 years old, had been allowed to shape the family coaster during and after his internship with a representative of Zierer. The footprint and track length were fixed, but within those limits he was given considerable freedom. At the opening, the project was no longer a paper dream but a real attraction that families could board. Flying Eagle is eleven metres high, 281 metres long and reaches 46 kilometres per hour. Images of the first rides appeared on social media, with Popelier himself present for the occasion. For visitors, the opening added a new accessible coaster to Legoland Billund: exciting enough to feel like a real roller coaster, yet clearly aimed at families. For theme park fans, the ride carried extra meaning because its designer came from the fan community rather than a conventional design office. Flying Eagle therefore became a small but memorable chapter in the park's modern coaster history.