Onride: 'Lost grafity' 🎢 4K/POV 2026 - Walibi Holland

On this BigDipper roller coaster with its intense turns and two inversions, it feels as if gravity has been lost. How does it feel to be weightless? Lost Gravity is a steel BigDipper roller coaster located at the Walibi Holland theme park . The roller coaster was built by Mack Rides and opened on March 24, 2016. The attraction features a black and yellow livery. Visitors are hoisted up to a height of 32 meters in eight-person carriages. This is followed by a steep descent with a 180-degree turn, followed by multiple hills designed to create airtime . During the ride, the train passes through two inversions: a dive drop and a zero-g roll. To create an even greater sense of weightlessness , an element called "Banked Top Hat" was specially designed for Walibi Holland. In this, visitors are quickly lifted vertically to a height of 30 meters to experience extraordinary G-forces. The Lost Gravity trains are the first in the BigDipper category. This is an entirely new category in the Mack Rides catalog. Four trains each accommodate eight people in two rows of four seats, where the two outer seats of the two rows have no floor. An iron floor plate is mounted under the two middle seats, although the seats in the middle are mounted so high that virtually no one can put their feet on the ground. The cars have a silver-colored mirrored look with comfortable seats and lap bars. The roller coaster logo is visible on the car in black. The theme of this roller coaster is unique. The story goes that a meteorite struck Biddinghuizen, causing gravity to disappear. Cars stand on their sides and upside down, trees grow incorrectly, and there is an inverted helicopter. The ride is also related to the theme, as you feel various G-forces during the ride that create a sense of weightlessness. The attraction's queue is also themed to the roller coaster's theme, namely lost gravity. It is a combination of a themed walk-through queue, designed to get visitors in the right mood, with a classic winding queue in the center on a square surface. The walk-through sections feature, among other things, a stationary but vibrating escalator, a corridor with upside-down hanging elevator doors, a room full of mirrors, and shapes referencing a meteorite. The outdoor sections are made with shipping containers, featuring, among other things, an upside-down terrace hanging from the ceiling, a bicycle "leaning" against a wall hanging above the queue, a section of pavement running vertically alongside the queue, an upside-down laundromat, and a staircase that runs from one wall to the other instead of from bottom to top. ©ThemeParkNomadsOfficial. All rights reserved. No part of this video's can be reproduced or redistributed without permission from Maxim Vanmullem, owner and creator. For permission requests. Use without consent with or without credit is in direct violation of copyright law.