Four injured, including woman who loses leg, after carts collide on rollercoaster

Blackleaf

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Alton Towers was under fire last night after four thrillseekers were seriously hurt on a rollercoaster with a history of problems.

The victims – three of them teenagers – were crushed after their carriage ploughed into an empty cart on the £18million Smiler ride, which has more loops than any other rollercoaster in the world, yesterday afternoon.

One is thought to have lost a leg, a staff source said.

It took five hours to cut all the passengers free from the wreckage and two were pictured hanging 25ft upside down.

Witnesses described hearing an ‘almighty bang’ before seeing ‘blood everywhere’.

The 53mph rollercoaster has been dogged with faults since it opened two years ago and had broken down earlier in the day.

The empty cart was on the track for a test run and had halted when it was hit from behind by a car packed with 16 visitors.

Parkgoers spoke last night of their anger that the ride, which has a world record 14 loops, was operating after a series of faults.

Alton Towers theme park in Staffordshire opened in 1980 in the grounds of the stately home of the same name - a former seat of the Earl of Shrewsbury - and is the most visited theme park in the UK and the ninth most visited in the world.

'There was blood everywhere': Victim loses a LEG in Alton Towers horror crash - but why was ride still running despite history of faults?


Victims crushed after carriage ploughed into empty cart on £18m Smiler

It took five hours to cut passengers free from wreckage in Staffordshire

53mph rollercoaster dogged with faults since it opened two years ago

Visitors angry at how ride with 14 loops was still operating after faults

By Andy Dolan and Jaya Narain for the Daily Mail and Richard Spillett and Emma Glanfield and Mark Duell for MailOnline
3 June 2015
Daily Mail



Horror on the rollercoaster: Passengers, some unconscious and covered in blood, dangle 25ft above the ground after the crash on the Smiler ride yesterday




Rescue on the Smiler: One witness said passengers were 'screaming and people nearby were running over'


On the scene: Rescue efforts were made to get to those trapped on the two-year-old ride at Alton Towers



Rescuers: The accident involved a moving carriage with 16 passengers and an empty, stationary carriage

Parkgoer films the aftermath of the collision:

Witnesses described hearing an ‘almighty bang’ before seeing ‘blood everywhere’.

The 53mph rollercoaster has been dogged with faults since it opened two years ago and had broken down earlier in the day.

The empty cart was on the track for a test run and had halted when it was hit from behind by a car packed with 16 visitors.

Parkgoers spoke last night of their anger that the ride, which has a world record 14 loops, was operating after a series of faults.


From above: An aerial view of the scene as emergency services work to rescue passengers at Alton Towers



A photo taken by a witness shows one of those trapped on board the huge rollercoaster yesterday



Firefighters on the scene: West Midlands Ambulance Service said four people were seriously injured



Help on its way: TV helicopter footage showed rescue crews removing those stuck on the rollercoaster


Scary: Passengers were seen being loaded onto stretchers as they hung at 45 degrees to the ground, 25ft up



Aid: Staff at the Alton Towers park constructed a platform to help emergency workers evacuate those trapped


Josh Pilling, 20, said: ‘There had been all sorts of problems with the ride. It kept stopping and starting and people were getting sick of waiting.





‘Then suddenly they sent out a carriage full of people and it stopped halfway up a loop.

‘Suddenly it started again and went headlong into the stationary carriage at the bottom with an ear-splitting crunch.

‘People were screaming and crying. They should have shut it down and got engineers in. I’m just shocked it could happen.

‘Anyone with a pair of eyes would have known not to let the carriage with people head down the loop when there was clearly an obstruction.’

Thomas Healy, 26, a business manager at McDonald’s, said he thought the full carriage was about to be evacuated when it stopped.

But he added: ‘Suddenly the carriage moved – almost as though staff hit the wrong button – and it went down the loop and then smashed into the empty carriage.

‘It was horrendous. The impact was massive and the people at the front looked unconscious for a bit.

‘The carriage was crushed at the front and they must have suffered leg injuries.

'There was one guy whose head was covered in blood.’


Working together: Emergency services at Alton Towers in Staffordshire after carriages on the ride crashed



Rescuers: A fire service rope access team works at Alton Towers after four people were seriously injured



Pictures of those trapped on board were posted on Twitter, with witnesses reporting some were unconscious



Witnesses said the empty carriage was sent out to test the ride but stopped on the track before another carriage with people in it smashed into the back of it


Another witness, Olivia Marston, said: ‘The bang was horrendous. Absolutely horrific. Everyone crowded round the area and there were lots of screams.’

THE WORLD'S FIRST 14-LOOP ROLLERCOASTER: THE SMILER



The £18million Smiler ride opened in May 2013 and is billed as the world's first 14-loop rollercoaster.

It holds the official Guinness World Record for the most loops in a rollercoaster, according to Alton Towers.

It measure more than 3,838 feet in length and can carry a total of 80 passengers when it is operating at full capacity.

Staff said the ride operates up to five carriages – each containing 16 passengers – at any one time, with the number of carriages running depending on how busy the park is. There were two carriages – one full and one empty – at the time of the crash.

The ride features vertical drops of up to 100ft, a ride time of 165 seconds and a track length three times the length of the resort's famous Oblivion ride.

Alton Towers claims that the ride 'provides an experience like no other' and 'will marmalise your body and mind, combining intense physical effects from plunging drops and extreme turns with twisted psychological effects.'

It is billed as 'not for the faint hearted' and features 'a series of twisted psychological effects including optical illusions, blinding lights and near misses designed to mess with your mind.'




On-board perspective of the record-breaking Smiler rollercoaster:

Four air ambulances with trauma doctors were sent to the Staffordshire theme park and a platform was built alongside the crash site to help paramedics reach the injured.

West Midlands Ambulance Service said the most seriously hurt riders were a boy of 18, a man of 27 and their girlfriends, aged 17 and 19. The 12 others suffered minor injuries.

Staffordshire Fire and Rescue sent four pumps, a rope rescue team and an aerial ladder platform.

The resort will be closed today while investigations continue, according to a spokesman. A management source said the ride might be shut for good.

Ian Crabbe, a divisional director for Alton Towers, said staff were devastated.

He said a full investigation was underway and officials from the Health and Safety Executive were on site.

Questioned about earlier technical issues, Mr Crabbe replied: ‘I don’t know the details of that but it will form part of our investigation, as will the possibility of human error.

‘I have been here for six years and this is the most serious incident in that time.

‘I’d say it was the most serious in the history of Alton Towers.

'Our major concern is with those injured. This ride has had its issues but that’s normal for rollercoasters.

‘I don’t think it would be fair to reflect on those issues and say they are connected – I don’t think they are.’

The park remained open following the 2pm collision.


Some visitors to the theme park claimed on Twitter that the ride had broken down earlier in the day


Staffordshire theme park: Merlin Entertainments - owner of Alton Towers (above) - saw its shares drop more than 3 per cent - down 15.9p to 444.3p - after the crash









Visitors to the park tweeted telling of their shock after seeing people trapped on board the ride

Marcus Gaines, of the European Coaster Club, said rides had automatic braking systems to ensure carriages stayed safe in separate sectors of the track.

He added: ‘For whatever reason, we have ended up with the computer system not realising that a train has stopped on the track, and it has not held the car in its own sector, allowing a collision to take place.

‘I can’t think of the last time something like that happened in the UK.


Up in the air: A Midlands Air Ambulance leaves Alton Towers after the incident on the ride carrying 16 people


Four air ambulances with a trauma doctor on board flew to the scene to help those who were injured


'You are twice as likely to get struck by lightning as be injured on a rollercoaster.’

Steve Wheaton, assistant chief officer for West Midlands Ambulance Service, said: ‘Of the 16 patients involved I can confirm four of them have significant lower limb injuries and were trapped in the carriage for quite some time.

‘Of the other 12 patients we now believe they will be walking wounded patients and the delay has just been in extricating them from the car.

‘Of the four critically injured with lower limb injuries two of them have gone to the Royal Stoke University Hospital and two of them have gone to the University Hospitals of Coventry and Warwickshire trauma centres.’

The resort’s parent company, Merlin Entertainment, saw more than £160million wiped from its stock market value on news of the incident.

Based in Poole, Dorset, it has run Alton Towers since buying out the Tussauds Group in May 2007.

It is the world’s second-largest visitor attraction operator behind Disney and runs 105 sites, 11 hotels and three holiday villages in 23 countries.

Alton Towers boasts the Smiler has a ‘series of twisted psychological effects including optical illusions, blinding lights and near misses designed to mess with your mind’.

It lasts two minutes and 45 seconds and has drops of 98ft.

During a press launch shortly before it opened, 16 journalists had to be rescued when the ride broke down.

Another incident saw riders injured by falling wheels.

In a statement last night, Nick Varney, chief executive of Merlin Entertainments, said: ‘This has been a terrible incident and a devastating day for everyone here.

‘I would like to express my sincerest regret and apology to everyone who suffered injury and distress today and to their families.

‘The safety of our visitors is our primary concern. The park will remain closed until we understand better the cause of this dreadful incident.

‘I would like to thank the emergency services for their swift and effective response.’

SEVEN INCIDENTS ON THE SMILER BEFORE YESTERDAY'S CRASH

The £18million ride has experienced numerous issues since it opened in May 2013, becoming the world’s first 14-loop rollercoaster.

May 31, 2013: Ahead of its official opening in May 2013, the ride experience a malfunction during an event for press and celebrities. The full carriage became stuck on the first vertical incline on the ride and passengers had to stay in their seats for an hour until they could be evacuated. Riders included the likes of rapper Tinchy Stryder and The Only Way Is Essex star Jessica Wright.

June 4, 2013: Just four days later, one carriage stalled during a test run before the ride was officially unveiled to the public.

June 10, 2013: The ride was then opened, but just a few days later the ride faced further problems and stalled on a batwing element.

Staff knew the ride was experiencing difficulties and so the carriage was empty at the time, except for weighted dummies. The cause of the incident was revealed as a computer malfunction which triggered the brakes.

July 21, 2013: Just over a month later, 48 people had to be evacuated from the ride after a piece of equipment fell off the ride. There were reports that the piece of equipment was a 1ft-long metal bar, and a small gap in the track reportedly appeared as a result. The ride closed for four days following the incident.

July 30, 2013: The ride was closed for a further five days while cracks discovered around the ride’s support structure were filled.

November 2, 2013: Four people riding in the front of a carriage were injured after they were hit by plastic wheels which detached as the train attempted a vertical incline. At the time, a spokesman said some 'small guide wheels' came off the ride, hitting father Kevin Hayes-Heath, his partner Wayne, a teenager girl and her father. Mr Hayes-Heath described the incident as 'pretty frightening'.

April 2014: Riders were left dangling 100ft above ground after a carriage on the ride got stuck on a vertical peak. The ride ground to a halt at the top of a near vertical section leaving more than 12 people stranded. At the time, one witness said: ‘There were people screaming. It must have been a terrifying ordeal for the passengers in the carriage.’



Sixteen people were involved in a collision between two carriages on Alton Towers' Smiler ride (file photo)



The rollercoaster, which cost £18million, travels at speeds of up to 53mph and its highest drop is 93ft


 
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Blackleaf

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Briddish engineering at its finest.


British engineering is the best in the world. British engineering built the modern world and gave the world the greatest engineer of all - Isambard Kingdom Brunel.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
48,429
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You just keep telling yourself that. Make one person a believer anyway.

Isambard Kingdom Brunel, the world's greatest ever engineer, in 1857 standing by the mighty launching chains of the SS Great Eastern which was, at the time, by far the largest ship ever built.

At the time, Britain led the world in everything, including engineering.

 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
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The brits are not known for their engineering.

Look at the HMS Hood. One shot from the Bismark was all it took.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
48,429
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Same guy that built the Titanic?

No. Brunel died in 1859.

The brits are not known for their engineering.

Yes, they are. We lead the world at it.

Look at the HMS Hood. One shot from the Bismark was all it took.
The Hood did not sink with one shot.

First pictures of Alton Towers crash victims: Teenage couple on their FIRST DATE were among four hurt in horrific rollercoaster accident which cost one rider a leg

All 16 riders involved in incident suffered injuries, 12 of them minor
Four critically injured when two carriages of Smiler ride crashed yesterday
Reports that one of those hurt has lost a leg in the theme park accident
Teenage couple from Yorkshire were among the four flown to hospital
Park closed today and tomorrow as bosses investigate cause of crash

A young couple seriously injured in the Alton Towers rollercoaster crash were on their 'first official date', a friend revealed today.

Joe Pugh, 18, and Leah Washington, 17, have been named in South Yorkshire as two of the four people who suffered serious leg wounds on the Staffordshire theme park's Smiler ride yesterday.

A friend of the pair in their home town of Barnsley said today that they had only been together for a week and 'wanted to do something fun' for the day.


Huddersfield University student Joe Pugh and Leah Washington were among four people seriously injured at Alton Towers. Friends wished them a speedy recovery online today as they were treated in hospital



The couple, who were on a day out at the theme park, were pictured on the Smiler after it crashed yesterday



Colleagues at the club where Joe works said the couple were on their 'first official date' at the theme park



Staff at the working men's club where Joe works put this message on their Facebook page today


Alice Holmes, 18, a barmaid at Oaks Working Men's Club, where Joe works, said: 'It was sort of their first official date'.

She added: 'They had just got together last week and they wanted to do something fun together. They walk their dogs together but had only just got together.

'When me and Joe were in work on Saturday, Leah texted him saying she wanted to do something different for their date.'

Miss Holmes added: 'Joe text me at 1.40pm from Alton Towers just saying jokey things. That was when I knew he was there.

'I went to the cinema after that and then I heard the news about Alton Towers. I thought "it can't be him". There are so many people who go there, I just thought it wouldn't be him.

'I text him asking if he was ok and my message wasn't coming up as read. Joe is on his phone all the time and I started getting worried because I could see that he hadn't read my message.

'Joe is into fashion and I could see him on the footage online. I knew it was him straight away because he had posted a picture of his outfit.

'I know his mum and dad have gone down to the hospital. I'm not sure how he is doing at the moment or what his injuries are like. I really hope that he is doing well and that his family are ok.'

Oaks Working Men's Club today posted a message on Facebook which read: 'After hearing the news about the terrible accident at Alton Towers it has to come to our attention that a member of our staff was involved.

'We at the oaks WMC would like to extend our prayers and best wishes in the speedy recovery of our barman Joe Pugh and his girlfriend Leah Washington.'

A spokesman for Oaks WMC added: 'As soon as we saw the pictures on the news we knew it was Joe. He has a style that everybody knows. He started working here in February and he has done a lot of shifts since then.

'Joe lives with his parents and commutes to university in Huddersfield. His girlfriend lives in this area too.

'Joe is a nice lad and we hope that he will be ok. We could see on the news that he was on a stretcher but we don't know the extent of his injuries.'

Eyewitnesses have said told how those injured in the crash waited for 'a good ten minutes' before staff arrived on the scene, but Alton Towers says its workers were on hand 'within two minutes'.

Lucy Walters told the BBC: 'Me and my friends were stood opposite the ride and after the collision two cars seemed to be meshed together.

'Obviously the people within the cars were terrified and screaming and shouting at us for help because we were so close to them. It was a good ten minutes before a member of Alton Towers staff arrived.'

She said that by that time 'blood was beginning to drip down onto the floor below'.

The four people who suffered critical injuries were airlifted to major trauma centres after the 16 occupants were rescued from 25ft up in the air at an angle of about 45 degrees.

The ordeal for some of the occupants lasted more than four hours, with the evacuation not complete until 6.35pm.

HISTORY OF ROLLERCOASTER ACCIDENTS: RARE BUT NOT UNKNOWN IN UK


Previous case: Hayley Williams, 16, died in 2004 after falling from a ride in Tenby, west Wales

Incidents on rollercoasters at theme parks in Britain are rare but not unknown.

The £18million ride the Smiler where yesterday's crash took place was temporarily closed in November 2013 after plastic guard wheels came loose and hit front-row riders.

The 14-loop rollercoaster, which took more than eight months to build, was shut for four days in July that year after a piece of track became dislodged, and was closed again for five days the following month because of another technical issue.

In July 2011, a number of people on a ride at M&D's theme park at Strathclyde Country Park, Motherwell, Lanarkshire, were stranded for more than eight hours when it came to a halt 60 feet above the ground.

In June 2006, firefighters had to rescue eight children and four adults trapped 40ft above the ground on the Terror Rack ride at the Pleasure Island park in Cleethorpes, Lincolnshire. It took the fire crews about an hour and a half to bring the people down to the ground after a safety device kicked in and halted the attraction.

In July 2005, four people were injured when a car came off its track at Ocean Beach amusement park in Rhyl, north Wales, when they were hit by another car.

A 32-year-old woman and 30-year-old man were taken to Glan Clwyd Hospital for treatment to chest injuries. Two other people received minor injuries and did not need treatment.


Another death in 2011: Student Gemma Savage died when two cars collided on the Treetop Twister ride at the Lightwater Valley theme park, near Ripon

The previous year, a 16-year-old girl plummeted to her death from a ride at Oakwood theme park near Tenby in west Wales.

Hayley Liane Williams, of Pontypool, south Wales, died after falling from the Hydro Ride.

She plunged 100ft from the ride on April 15 2004. Swansea schoolboy Martin Rothwell, aged 10 at the time, was hit in the head and injured by the teenager as she fell past him. Safety changes were later made to the ride.

In November 2006, a French firm was found guilty of breaches of health and safety law after the death of a 20-year-old student on a rollercoaster.

Durham University student Gemma Savage died when two cars collided on the Treetop Twister ride at the Lightwater Valley theme park, near Ripon, North Yorkshire, on June 20 2001.

Paris-based Reverchon Industries SA, which manufactured and supplied the ride, was found guilty at Leeds Crown Court of two charges of failing to ensure its safe design and construction, and failing to give information necessary to ensure the ride was safe when open to the public.




 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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Red Deer AB
If you are going on a thrill ride what better way to get your money's worth than picking one with a 'bad reputation'?

Looks like we found all that missing drill-stem.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
48,429
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If you are going on a thrill ride what better way to get your money's worth than picking one with a 'bad reputation'?

Looks like we found all that missing drill-stem.


The most thrilling ride I ever dare go on is the teacups. That's good enough for me.

 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
48,429
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Alton Towers Smiler crash: Leah Washington's leg amputated

8 May 2015
BBC News


Leah Washington had been on the Smiler ride with her boyfriend


A 17-year-old girl injured in a rollercoaster crash at Alton Towers has had her leg amputated, it has emerged.

Leah Washington was on the front row of the Smiler ride, which crashed into an empty carriage in front of it.

Three others who were also in the front row sustained serious leg injuries, while a fifth person is being treated for internal injuries.

The theme park reopened earlier, six days after the crash, but the ride remains closed.

Ms Washington's father, David Washington, from Barnsley, said: "Leah has suffered a life-changing injury and now has many months of rehabilitation ahead of her.

"We have done this to put people's minds at rest and we would also ask everyone to respect Leah's privacy as she undergoes this rehabilitation."


Leah Washington and her boyfriend Joe Pugh on the ride just after it crashed


Daniel Thorpe, Vicky Balch, Joe Pugh and Leah Washington (pictured l-r) are all being treated in hospital for serious leg injuries


Her leg was amputated above the left knee and she also suffered a fractured left hand.

Alton Towers said it was "deeply saddened" by the news, adding that it will "provide full support to all of those involved now, and throughout their recovery and rehabilitation".

Ms Washington's boyfriend, 18-year-old Joe Pugh from Barnsley, also remains at Royal Stoke Hospital where he is being treated for two broken knees and "extensive" hand injuries, a hospital spokesperson said.

Vicky Balch, from Leyland in Lancashire, who turned 20 while in Royal Stoke Hospital has undergone surgery and is in a "serious but stable" condition, according to her family.

Daniel Thorpe, 27, from Buxton, Derbyshire, was treated at University Hospital Coventry for a collapsed lung and a fractured leg. His condition is described as "serious but stable".

Chanda Singh, 49, from Wednesbury in the Black Country, who was sitting in the second row of the Smiler, was admitted to Walsall Manor Hospital with internal injuries.

She had surgery to her stomach, and has a damaged liver and blood clots, her daughter said.

Owners Merlin Entertainments said it had carried out "a thorough review" of safety procedures.

Health and Safety Executive (HSE) inspectors have also been on site.


Alton Towers reopened at 10:00 BST, six days after the crash


Honeymooner Craig Cooper: "It was horrific what happened but I'm glad they've opened the rest of Alton Towers."

A number of people who had pre-booked tickets for Monday have said they will not now attend.

Student Louise Riley, who had planned to visit Alton Towers with a group of friends, said they did not want to feel "like guinea pigs" on the first day since the accident.

"We're quite a bit nervous that other rides have been closed as well," she said. "It makes you question the safety of all the rides."


The area around the Smiler rollercoaster remains closed and fenced off


From the scene: Trystan Jones, BBC News Online

The queues at the entrance to Alton Towers could be measured in the dozens, rather than hundreds soon after the gates opened at 10:00 BST.

The car parks also looked pretty empty, although it was early in the day. Nobody I spoke to was worried about safety and a couple said they would be happy to ride the Smiler if it had been open.

One couple told me there was far more chance of having an accident on the way to the park than at it.

I spoke to two visitors who used to work at the park. They said safety was really strict, with operators having to complete hours of training before being allowed to operate rides. On some rides operators even have to complete written exams, they said.


Alton Towers crash: Leah Washington's leg amputated - BBC News