View all news articles linked to Pavillon de thé at Walibi Holland.
Pavillon de Thé closed during Walibi discount voucher campaign
In early May 2026, Pavillon de Thé was again among the closed attractions at Walibi Holland. This time guests did not receive a true free ticket, but a voucher for one free ticket when buying two adult tickets.
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In early May 2026, the debate over closed attractions and compensation returned at Walibi Holland. Looopings reported that visitors were again handed vouchers at the exit after missing five attractions: Skydiver, Splash Battle, Blast, Pavillon de Thé and Wind Seekers. The situation was less severe than the previous week, when eight to ten attractions had been closed and genuine free tickets were handed out. Even so, the new promotion worked differently from what the wording on the paper suggested. The voucher prominently mentioned a free ticket, but the small print explained that guests only received one free ticket when buying two adult tickets. According to Looopings, that was not cheaper than online discounted tickets without the voucher. For Pavillon de Thé, the article is relevant because the tea cups again served as a visible sign of a reduced ride lineup. The closure was not only operational; it also touched on communication and trust. When a family attraction remains closed, the way compensation is framed helps shape how visitors judge the day.
Free tickets after Pavillon de Thé closed on King's Day
On King's Day 2026, Pavillon de Thé stayed closed because of staff shortages, alongside nine other attractions. Walibi Holland gave every departing guest a free ticket for later in the season.
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On King's Day 2026, Walibi Holland's staff shortage became so visible that ten attractions remained closed, including Pavillon de Thé. Looopings also reported that many food outlets could not open. For visitors, the impact was very tangible: guests who came to Biddinghuizen on a national holiday missed not only thrill rides but also an accessible family attraction such as the tea cups. Walibi tried to soften the blow by handing every departing visitor a free ticket. With a unique code, guests could book another visit later in the season, valid through September 2026. The article mentions around 3,500 visitors on King's Day and predicted another reduced lineup the following day, with Pavillon de Thé again listed among the closed attractions. For the ride's history, this is a notable moment because the closure was not treated as an isolated operational detail. It triggered park-wide compensation and made Pavillon de Thé part of a broader story about staffing, guest expectations and trust in the advertised attraction lineup.
Pavillon de Thé opened later due to ongoing staff shortage
In October 2025, Pavillon de Thé stayed closed until 12:00 because Walibi Holland's staff shortage was still not resolved. Looopings placed the measure alongside delayed openings for other rides and long-running maintenance elsewhere in the park.
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In October 2025, a Looopings article showed that Walibi Holland's staffing problems were still shaping the daily ride lineup. The new coaster YoY did not open until 12:00, but limitations were visible elsewhere too. Pavillon de Thé and the bumper cars Tequila Taxi's also stayed closed until noon. For visitors, that meant a low-threshold family ride was missing during the morning, precisely when families and guests seeking calmer experiences often build their day around smaller attractions. Walibi communicated the reason for YoY's delayed opening unusually clearly with a sign naming staff shortages. Pavillon de Thé was mentioned as part of the same wider operational pressure. The article places the tea cups in a period when staff shortages, Halloween planning and maintenance on rides such as Blast and Los Sombreros all shaped the park's rhythm. It captures how even a simple family attraction became dependent on staffing decisions in a park that was simultaneously investing heavily in new headline rides.
Pavillon de Thé part of major closure wave at Walibi Holland
In April 2025, Walibi Holland kept twelve attractions closed, including Pavillon de Thé. The park blamed a combination of staff shortages, technical issues and delayed maintenance, with guests set to receive compensation.
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In April 2025, Looopings reported an unusually wide wave of closures at Walibi Holland. Twelve attractions were unavailable, including Pavillon de Thé. The reasons differed by ride: Lost Gravity had a technical fault, Crazy River was still in winter maintenance, and most of the other closed rides were attributed to staff shortages. For Pavillon de Thé, it meant the tea cups once again disappeared from the regular operating lineup. A park spokesperson described staffing as the biggest challenge at that moment. What makes the story useful for the attraction's history is Walibi's explanation of how closures were chosen: on weekdays outside holidays, the park mainly attracted school groups, so management selected rides based on visitor interest. That frames the closure of Pavillon de Thé as part of a wider operational calculation, not simply a forgotten ride. Food outlets were also affected, creating longer lines elsewhere. Walibi said guests would be compensated appropriately, usually through discount vouchers or free tickets at the exit.
During the 2023 Halloween Fright Nights, Pavillon de Thé stayed closed all day because of persistent staff shortages. Looopings described how the ride lineup shrank while queues for the open major coasters grew sharply.
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In October 2023, Looopings reported that Walibi Holland's Halloween Fright Nights were under serious pressure. Pavillon de Thé was one of eight attractions that remained closed all day because of the ongoing staff shortage, alongside rides such as Crazy River, G-Force, El Rio Grande, Splash Battle, Walibi Express and Merlin's Magic Castle. The issue went beyond the tea cups themselves: once evening arrived, the operating lineup shrank even further and visitors were pushed toward the major coasters. Queue times there rose to two or even three hours. For Pavillon de Thé, the article matters because it shows how a family ride can disappear from the offering during one of the park's busiest and most expensive events of the year. Walibi handed out discount vouchers for a later visit, but they could not be used for the remaining Fright Nights. The closure therefore became part of a broader discussion about staffing, communication and value for money during Halloween at Walibi.
School trips lead to preventive closure of Pavillon de Thé
Walibi Holland closed Pavillon de Thé preventively on busy school trip days, together with several other family rides. The park wanted to prevent nuisance, but the decision stood out because Walibi had been presenting itself more strongly as a family park.
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In June 2023, Looopings reported that Walibi Holland could close several family rides preventively on weekdays dominated by school trips. Pavillon de Thé was explicitly listed, alongside La Grande Roue, Le Tour des Jardins and the Walibi Express. According to the park, pupils had often used these rides to cause nuisance, forcing staff to spend extra time supervising them. Closing the rides in advance was meant to avoid that problem. For visitors, the decision was striking: the tea cups are not a thrill ride but a gentle family attraction on Main Street. That made the measure feel at odds with Walibi's broader effort to present itself as more family-friendly. It was also notable that the closures were not widely announced through social media, the website or the app. For the history of Pavillon de Thé, the article shows that the ride was affected not only by technical or staffing issues, but also by crowd management and operational choices around school groups.