Plopsa Coo

Plopsa Coo is a themepark in Wallonia near the waterfalls of Coo in Stavelot, owned and operated by Plopsa.

Plopsa Coo
Previously known as Télécoo
LocationStavelot, Belgium
Opened1976 as Télécoo
2007 as Plopsa Coo
OwnerPlopsa
AttendanceDecrease 215.000 (2019)
Attractions
Total23
Roller coasters2
Water rides2
Websitewww.plopsacoo.be

History

Waterfalls

The history of the park starts in the 15th century, when the first small waterfall of Coo was created. Two centuries later monks built a second larger waterfall to protect the village of Petit-Coo from flooding. From the 18th century, as mobility grew, more and more tourists came to see the waterfalls, therefor a self-service restaurant was opened in 1920. It wasn't until 1955 that a first attraction appeared at the site, when Professor Gaston Dugardin opened a chairlift - called Le Télésiege - that took visitors to the top of a 220-meter hill. In the decades that followed Dugardin opened a go-kart track, mini golf and a playground.[1]

Télécoo

In 1976 Gaston handed over the operation to his son, Didier Dugardin. He turned the area into an amusement park and called it Télécoo, a combination of the first attraction Le Télésiege and the village where the park was located Petit-Coo. In the 1980s Télécoo expanded with a number of attractions, including a simulator, a classic car track, two bobsleigh tracks and in 1989 a roller coaster and a wildpark.

Waterfalls of Coo

In the 1990s Télécoo had a hard time, they could not compete with Walibi Belgium and Bobbejaanland, which grew strongly. In this decade the park opened just one attraction, a tree trunk attraction called Splash. At the end of the 1990s other Belgian parks were taken over by large companies: Premier Parks took over Walibi and Bellewaerde and Meli Park was taken over by Studio 100. Didier Dugardin also decided to sell his park. However no buyer wanted to do that, which made that in 2004 Télécoo was the only Belgian amusement park that was still in the hands of the family that originally built it.[2]

Plopsa Coo

In December of 2005 Studio 100 / Plopsa took over the entire domain of Télécoo for € 6 million, the company took over so they could make their characters popular in Wallonia. The domain of Télécoo also included Targnon Adventure (team building activities), CooKayak (kayak rental) and Château de Targnon (room rental). The first two were also taken over by Plopsa, but the Château (through the company Immosoirheid) was personally taken over by Gert Verhulst and Hans Bourlon.[3][4]

Vicky the ride

After the takeover, the park opened in the 2006 season as it did before, while the new owner started working on various adjustments. Various attractions - such as the go-kart track and the roller coaster were renovated, various shops were removed and the greenery was embellished. Several attractions were also added, such as the dancing fountains, pedal boats and a carousel. On March 31, 2007 the renovated park was officially opened under the new name Plopsa Coo.[3]

In the following years the park was further expanded with the Vliegende Fietsen (2008), the Octopus (2008-2018), the Konijntjes (2008), the JBC Laburint (2008), the Autorijschool (2009), Vicky the Ride (2011), DinoSplash (2015), Doorloopweide (2015), a playground (2019) and the Vlindervlucht (2020). The tree trunk attraction was provided with a new Maya the Bee theme in 2011. The rollercoaster changed its theme twice, first in 2011 to Piet Piraat and in 2014 to Vicky the Viking with the name Halvar.

The Wildlife Park was resold in 2013 and has since been closed for Plopsa Coo visitors.

During the 2021 European floods the park got flooded and all attractions, shops and other facilities got severely damaged. The Plopsa Group sent help from their other parks and within a week Plopsa Coo was ready to re-open.[5]

Future

Plopsa presented the future vision for Plopsa Coo in 2019, € 25 million was to be invested in the park with the arrival of a hotel, indoor park, a water park and an upgrade of the layout of the walkways. All expansions would be completed by 2025. However the plan has been paused by Plopsa, because there is plan to increase the taxes for the park. In the proposed plans by the municipal councillors Plopsa Coo should pay six times as much tax from € 50,000 per year to € 300,000 per year.[6][7]

Visitor numbers

Below is an overview of the development of Plopsa Coo's visitor numbers, as stated in the annual figures.[8][9]

Year Visitors
2011 366.900 Increase
2012 344.626 Decrease
2013 340.048 Decrease
2014 299.613 Decrease
2015 317.696 Increase
2016 244.587 Decrease
2017 250.947 Increase
2018 234.005 Decrease
2019 215.000 Decrease

References

  1. "De geschiedenis van: Plopsa Coo". Themeparkfreaks (in Dutch). 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2021-04-04.
  2. "Reprise par Studio 100, Télécoo change de visage". Le Soir (in French). 18 January 2006. Retrieved 2021-04-04.
  3. "Lutin Plop blaast pretpark Coo nieuw leven in". De Standaard (in Flemish). 14 July 2006. Retrieved 2021-04-04.
  4. "Studio 100 neemt attractiepark Télécoo over". De Standaard (in Flemish). 15 December 2005. Retrieved 2021-04-04.
  5. "Plopsa Coo opent deze zaterdag al opnieuw de deuren". hln.be. 2021-07-22. Retrieved 2021-08-06.
  6. "Plopsa Coo va faire peau neuve et construire un hôtel!". Édition digitale de Bruxelles (in French). 2019-11-05. Retrieved 2021-04-04.
  7. "Plopsa Coo gèle un investissement de 25 millions d'euros prévu pour des travaux". RTBF Info (in French). 2020-01-23. Retrieved 2021-04-04.
  8. "PLOPSA BVBA STAATSBLAD PUBLICATIES en JAARREKENINGEN (BE0405853542)". www.staatsbladmonitor.be. Retrieved 2021-04-04.
  9. "Belgisch pretpark Plopsa Coo vreest voor belastingverhoging: miljoeneninvesteringen opgeschort". Looopings (in Dutch). 2020-01-23. Retrieved 2021-04-04.

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