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Loch Ness Monster is a steel roller coaster located at Busch Gardens Williamsburg in Williamsburg, Virginia. Manufactured by Arrow Development and designed by Ron Toomer , it was the first roller coaster in the world to feature interlocking loops .
On August 30, 1996, Busch Gardens Williamsburg announced the addition of Alpengeist for the 1997 season. ... adjacent to the Loch Ness Monster.
Busch Gardens Williamsburg (formerly Busch Gardens Europe and Busch Gardens: The Old Country) is a 422-acre (1.71 km 2) amusement park in James City County near Williamsburg, Virginia, United States, located approximately 60 miles (100 km) northwest of Virginia Beach.
McKay’s hotel in Drumnadrochit has been turned into the new $1.8 million Loch Ness Centre and last August hundreds of Nessie fans gathered at the loch for the biggest monster hunt in 50 years ...
On June 13, 1989, five park guests were injured on the Loch Ness Monster roller coaster when a train collided with a tree at an estimated 15 mph (24 km/h). The tree had been blown onto the coaster's tracks by a sudden storm. The collision happened on a slightly banked right turn that follows a minor descent from the coaster's second lift hill.
Mystery hunters converged on a Scottish lake on Saturday to look for signs of the mythical Loch Ness Monster. The Loch Ness Center said researchers would try to seek evidence of Nessie using ...
New video footage of a mysterious, "30-foot creature" is moving swiftly through the water in Loch Ness, Scotland, and begs the question as to what everyone's favorite loch-dwelling cryptid means to...
The interlocking loops on Loch Ness Monster. Arrow Dynamics designed several roller coasters with interlocking loops, including Loch Ness Monster at Busch Gardens Williamsburg (1978) and Orient Express at Worlds of Fun (1980). This element consists of two perpendicular vertical loops that are intertwined, with one wrapping inside the other.