The UK’s first and biggest indoor trampoline and adventure park group is bringing its adrenaline-fuelled, family-fun experiences to Whinmoor next year.
Through a multi-million-pound investment, Flip Out will be creating the company’s biggest trampoline park,100,000sq ft site in Plateworks, Coal Road in Whinmoor, with more than 150 interconnected trampolines, airbags, basketball, reaction walls and dodgeball court.
It will also include a gigantic 18,000 sq ft inflatable area, a state-of-the-art Laser Quest, an entire zone of super slides that will house slides of all different heights, speeds and shoot customers on to air bags, a Ninja obstacle course with a half-pipe ramp at the end, a multi-storey Ninja Playground, a drift bike arena, a roller disco, interactive football pitches, backyard football zone, soft play, a huge arcade area and state-of-the-art dodgems.
Talking about this exciting new opening, Richard Beese, co-owner of We Do Play, which specialises in creating immersive leisure and hospitality experiences, one of which is Flip Out, said: “Leeds has been ready for a shake-up for some time and what better than creating 60 new jobs, in the coolest venue in town. The site is so big we will introduce some stand-alone concepts too, making it the ultimate entertainment destination in Yorkshire. We just know it’s going to be really popular and has dedicated parking for up to 350 cars.”
There will also be 10 party rooms, plus corporate meeting rooms, perfect for local businesses to use for networking events.
The announcement of plans to open the first-ever Flip Out in Leeds follows hot on the heels of new 2024 openings in Coventry and Watford, both of which are scheduled to open later this year, bringing the number of Flip Out indoor adventure parks in the UK to 35.
Support independent community journalism!
East Side Story covers the people, places and stories in Leeds that are too often overlooked. While national headlines chase conflict and clickbait, we focus on real communities and the issues shaping daily life in East Leeds.
Divisive content, AI noise and online rumours spread faster than ever. At the same time, many mainstream outlets are stretched and rarely spotlight the community organisations and local champions who deserve recognition.
East Side Story was created to change that. We answer only to our readers. We have no corporate owners or billionaire funders. Our journalists report freely, ask difficult questions and hold power to account.
Your support helps us keep this work going. Monthly contributions make the biggest impact because they allow us to invest in deeper reporting and fearless local journalism.
Supporters also receive exclusive updates, behind the scenes insights and other benefits as a thank you for keeping independent journalism alive.