Ariel view of Sunway Lagoon, a popular Water Park in Malaysia. A water park is an amusement park that features waterplay areas, such as water slides, splash pads, spraygrounds (water playgrounds), lazy rivers, or other recreational bathing environments. Water parks in more current states of development may also be equipped with some type of artificial surfing or bodyboarding environment such as a wave pool or a FlowRider. Casual lingering in a swimming pool. ...
Casual lingering in a swimming pool. ...
Germany Pavilion, part of the Epcot Center theme park in Orlando, Florida Amusement park (also called theme park) is the generic term for a collection of rides and other entertainment attractions assembled for the purpose of entertaining a fairly large group of people. ...
A water slide A water slide is a slide or tube with water flowing down it. ...
Urban beach style splash pad located within the municipal swimming baths of Torontos High Park A splash pad is an area for water play that has no standing water. ...
A Lazy River is a water ride found in many amusement parks or water parks. ...
Buttons Kaluhiokalani at Banzai Pipeline, December 1981 Surfing is a surface water sport in which the participant is carried by a breaking wave on a surfboard. ...
Bodyboarding is a form of wave riding using a bodyboard, which consists of a small roughly rectangular piece of foam, shaped to a hydrodynamic form. ...
A wave pool in use. ...
The FlowRider aboard the Royal Caribbean ship Freedom of the Seas A Flowrider® or Flow Rider® is an artificial sheet wave surfing environment incorporated in many waterparks and hotels. ...
Evolution of waterparks
The very idea for a water park may have been inspired by a Hungarian spa.[citation needed] Some waterparks are more spa-oriented, e.g. Schwaben Quellen, a member of European Waterparks Association (EWA) has no water slides, but instead has lots of saunas, steam rooms, "adventure showers", and relaxation-oriented waterplay areas. A day spa is a business establishment which people visit for personal care treatments such as massages and facials. ...
Waterparks emerging from spas continue to more closely resemble mountain resorts as they become four-season destinations. Therefore the whole amusement and leisure time industry is getting even more concentrated as the winter sports are mixing up with the summertime water rides - in time and space. A process of concentration can be observed in the hybrid segments of theme-, amusement-, and waterparks. Waterparks have become increasingly popular since they began in the 1950's. The United States has the largest and most concentrated waterpark market, with over a thousand waterparks currently and dozens of new parks opening each year. Major organizations are IAAPA (International Associotion of Amusement Parks and Attractions) and WWA (World Waterpark Association). With eighteen indoor water parks, Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin, is recognized as the "Water Park Capital of the World." It boasts America's largest indoor and outdoor water parks -- see Noah's Ark. Wisconsin Dells is a city located in south-central Wisconsin, in the United States. ...
Noahs Ark is the worlds largest water park, with over 40 water slides and dozens of other various attractions. ...
Indoor water parks Indoor waterparks were a phenomenon that started in the Wisconsin Dells in the 1990s but have since caught on quickly in many areas. Usually resort hotels featuring massive indoor waterparks that are often reserved exclusively for overnight guests, companies like Great Wolf Resorts/Great Wolf Lodge and Kalahari Resorts have branched out from their origin in the Dells to open new locations around the country. The largest indoor water park in the United States is the Kalahari Resort] in Wisconsin Dells Wisconsin which opened in May 2000. The premier UK indoor waterpark is the Sandcastle Waterworld at Blackpool England which has a Master Blaster, the world's longest indoor roller coaster style ride.
Water park-like spaces Spaces that are similar to waterparks include urban beaches, and splash pads, and smaller waterplay areas such as waterslides in many hotels and public pools. For example, the Delta Chelsea hotel in Toronto features a four story waterslide called the "corkscrew". A jogger cools off at the urban beach in the heart of downtown Toronto at Yonge and Dundas Square (multiple exposure picture). ...
Urban beach style splash pad located within the municipal swimming baths of Torontos High Park A splash pad is an area for water play that has no standing water. ...
The Delta Chelsea The Delta Chelsea is hotel located in Toronto, Ontario and the largest one in Canada. ...
See also Germany Pavilion, part of the Epcot Center theme park in Orlando, Florida Amusement park (also called theme park) is the generic term for a collection of rides and other entertainment attractions assembled for the purpose of entertaining a fairly large group of people. ...
External links - International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions
- World Waterpark Association
- Water park links and locations in every US state
- Water park:classification of amusement parks
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