WhiteWater World

WhiteWater World
WhiteWater World
WhiteWater World logo
Location Coomera, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia
Coordinates 27°51′52″S 153°18′53″E / 27.864384°S 153.314718°E / -27.864384; 153.314718 (WhiteWater World)Coordinates: 27°51′52″S 153°18′53″E / 27.864384°S 153.314718°E / -27.864384; 153.314718 (WhiteWater World)
Address Dreamworld Parkway
Website Official website
Owner Ardent Leisure
General Manager Todd Coates[1]
Opened 8 December 2006 (2006-12-08)
Operating season All year round, heated in winter
Closed Christmas Day and Anzac Day Morning
Area 4 hectares (9.9 acres) at opening[2]
Attractions
  • A single pool
  • 10 water slides
  • 2 children's areas
Slogan Water Powered WOW!
Amusement Parks Portal

WhiteWater World is a water park situated in the suburb of Coomera, on the Gold Coast, Australia[3]. It is owned and operated by Ardent Leisure.

After years of planning and a year of construction, WhiteWater World opened to the public on 8 December 2006. The ten Australian beach culture themed attractions cost approximately A$56 million. These included The Green Room, Super Tubes Hydrocoaster, The Rip, The BRO, Temple of Huey, Cave of Waves, Wiggle Bay and Pipeline Plunge. Since then, three additional water slides: two called Little Rippers and one called The Wedgie, have been added.

WhiteWater World was designed to be very efficient in its water use. Since opening, the quantity of visitors has consistently been above expectations. Ardent Leisure has submitted a development application for the expansion of the water park and plans to add five new attractions.

Contents

History

Development

During 2004, Macquarie Leisure, since renamed Ardent Leisure, began planning a water park to be located next to the company's existing Dreamworld theme park. Dreamworld's Chief Executive Officer, Stephen Gregg, and General Manager of Special Projects, Bob Tan, visited water parks around the world to discover the most thrilling and cutting-edge water rides available. Tan stated that "...the drawing board for the new park was a restaurant napkin in a little cafe in the US".[4]

On 28 November 2005, Macquarie Leisure announced it would invest $56 million on the project. The announcement referred to the Dreamworld Water Park.[5][6][7][8]

Construction began shortly after the announcement. The existing Dreamworld car park was redesigned to accommodate more cars and the addition of a water park in the southern portion. Construction of the water park began in January 2006. In June, two of the three slide towers were complete, with several slides in the early phases of construction. One month later, several attractions were announced by the park with others being speculated upon. Some attractions were nearing completion in September and all the planned attractions had been revealed by October.[9]

WhiteWater World opened three weeks ahead of schedule on 8 December 2006 after a week of previews.[10][11][12] The park opened with ten attractions, including The Green Room, The Rip, Super Tubes Hydrocoaster, The BRO, The Temple of Huey (3 individual slides), Pipeline Plunge, Wiggle Bay and the Cave of Waves.[13] At this time, the park featured many Australian and world firsts: The Rip and Super Tubes Hydrocoaster were both Australian firsts;[14][15] The BRO was a world first;[16] and The Green Room was Australia's biggest Tornado slide.[17][18][19] After six months of operation Ardent Leisure announced that WhiteWater World attracted 247,360 visitors, producing revenue of $8.7 million and a profit of $4 million.[20][21]

Performance

Looking towards WhiteWater World's entrance from the entrance of the adjacent Dreamworld theme park.
Looking towards WhiteWater World's entrance from the entrance of the adjacent Dreamworld theme park.

In the first 24 days of operation to 31 December 2006, WhiteWater World performed above expectation with approximately 23,000 guests.[10][22] WhiteWater World continued to exceed Ardent Leisure's expectations during its first year of operation.[23][24] The first year saw 493,227 guests, exceeding the 450,000 estimate, earning the park over $8.4 million in revenue.[25][26][27] The park continued to perform well in subsequent years.[28]

In August 2010, Ardent Leisure announced a decline in revenue and profits in its theme park division. It stated that a capital expenditure plan had been endorsed which will "...strengthen ride inventory and consumer appeal".[29]

WhiteWaterWorld is currently ranked as one of the world's most water efficient parks because of its sustainable water management and environmentally friendly technology.[4][21][30][31][32][33]

Expansion

In September 2007, the park added two attractions; a pair of ProSlide Cannon Bowls called The Little Rippers and an events venue called The Shell.[34]. A month later, WhiteWater World submitted a development application to the Gold Coast City Council to extend the water park.[35] The main feature of the application was a 25-metre (82 ft) tower featuring three new water slides; two Mammoth slides and a Tornado Tantrum Alley. The expansion proposal also featured a lazy river (featuring a "wave channel") and a large water play area.[36] After two years, the application was approved by the council.[35] WhiteWater World has not yet proceeded with the expansion, citing the financial crisis of 2007-2010 for the delay.[37]

In December 2009, it was reported that WhiteWater World planned to add a WhiteWater West AquaLoop. However its competitor, Wet'n'Wild Water World, entered into an exclusivity agreement with the manufacturer to ensure WhiteWater World did not receive one.[38] Three months later in February 2010, it was announced that WhiteWater World would build an alternative attraction built by ProSlide before the April school holidays.[39][40][41] The Wedgie was the first ride in Australia to feature a trap door release[42] and was marketed as Australia's first looping water slide.[40][43]

In 2011, WhiteWater World's contract with Nickelodeon was terminated and Nickelodeon's Pipeline Plunge was renamed Pipeline Plunge.[19][44]

Attractions

WhiteWater World features several water slide attractions, a large wave pool and separate children and toddler areas. There are food and beverage outlets, retail stores, a surf school, a function area and numerous shaded areas with seating. The park features three water slide towers, each featuring a collection of slides grouped by the level of thrill. The park also features three family-oriented water attractions separate from the towers.[45] All of the park's attractions have an Australian beach culture theme.[30]

A view across Dreamworld and WhiteWater World's car park towards the Super Tubes Hydrocoaster and The Green Room.
Super Tubes Hydrocoaster and The Green Room from the car park.

The slide tower near the entrance contains the park's main thrill slides.[45] The Wedgie is a body slide featuring a trap-door release into a near-vertical 17-metre (56 ft) drop.[46] Riders then enter a fast, downward-spiralling turn and reach speeds of nearly 45 kilometres per hour (28 mph) before they are slowed in a run-out chute.[42][47][48] The ride was the first ProSlide SuperLOOP in the world.[49] The Green Room consists of four people boarding a cloverleaf-shaped tube in which they traverse a 66-metre (217 ft) long tunnel followed by a 17-metre (56 ft) drop into a funnel.[17] Within the funnel, riders oscillate back and forth up the walls at the side and drop into a splash pool.[50] Since its opening, The Green Room has been Australia's largest ProSlide Tornado beating Wet'n'Wild Water World's Tornado in height and tunnel length.[17][18] On the Super Tubes Hydrocoaster[45], three people sit on a 45-kilogram (99 lb) raft, whose weight is mainly attributable to a large magnet on its underside.[51] Riders experience several steep drops followed by magnet-powered inclines, ending with a splashdown in a small pool.[52] The Super Tubes Hydrocoaster was the second ProSlide Hydro Magnetic Rocket Slide in the world and continues to be Australia's only water coaster.[15]

The BRO's eight lanes descend tight helices before dipping down two hills before the splashdown.
The BRO, the world's first ProSlide 8-lane Octopus Racer.

The second slide tower, along the park's southern border, features two rides with more moderate thrill ratings.[45] On The Rip, riders hop into a four-person, cloverleaf-shaped tube. They descend a dark tunnel before entering a large, open bowl. The raft circles the centre of the bowl then exits down through the centre and into a splashdown pool.[53] The Rip is the first and currently the only ProSlide Behemoth Bowl in Australia.[14] The BRO (Blue Ringed Octopus) is a water slide consisting of eight 120-metre (390 ft) long lanes.[54] From a height of 16 metres (52 ft), riders mount a personal mat and slide head first down an enclosed spiral tunnel before merging into open, parallel lanes to the finish. In 24 seconds, riders can reach speeds of up to 50 kilometres per hour (31 mph). The BRO has a capacity of 1000 riders per hour.[19][55] When The BRO opened in 2006, it was the largest ProSlide Octopus Racer in the world and is the only one in Australia.[16]

The Temple of Huey's and the Little Rippers' slide tower.
The slide tower housing The Temple of Huey and the Little Rippers. Some slides interact with Dreamworld's Cyclone roller coaster.

The slide tower in the southeast corner of the park contains five slides designed for those who desire a mild thrill[45]. Some of the slides on this tower interact with Dreamworld's Cyclone roller coaster. The Little Rippers are two ProSlide duelling cannon bowl slides. The slides can accommodate guests riding in either one or two person tubes.[34] Riders begin in one of two parallel chutes before entering tunnels and splitting off in opposite directions. Each tunnel has a steep drop into the bowl element of the ride, after which the raft drops down through the centre and into a run-out chute.[56] The other three slides on this tower are collectively known as The Temple of Huey. Guests can ride in a single or double tube.[57] All three slides are ProSlide Pipelines.[58] The three slides are individually named Broken Headz, Cut Snake and Screamin Right Handers and are 99, 104 and 88 metres (325, 341 and 289 feet) long respectively. Broken Headz and Cut Snake are enclosed and Screamin Right Handers is an open flume.[19][59][60][61]

Three family-oriented attractions are located on the ground level, detached from the three slide towers. Two of these are children's areas and the third is a wave pool. Pipeline Plunge is a children's area with four flume slides and hundreds of water activities.[19] The area, originally called Nickelodeon's Pipeline Plunge, is a large, multi-level water play structure featuring an 1,000-litre (220 imp gal; 260 US gal) tipping bucket which dumps water on guests every few minutes. It played host to two Slime Fest events in 2009 that included several live shows, a dunking chair and "Australia's biggest sliming" where 1,000 litres (220 imp gal; 260 US gal) of slime was dumped on park guests using green coloured water in the giant tipping bucket twice daily.[62][63][64][65] The mass sliming returned in the 2010/2011 summer holidays as part of the Summer Funomenon.[66][67] Pipeline Plunge is a WhiteWater West Aqua Play area.[19] Wiggle Bay is a Wiggles themed toddler area featuring musical and interactive water play activities, a shallow pool and four Wiggles-coloured water slides, located at the back of the area. these were manufactured by ProSlide. The interactive features are manufactured by WaterPlay.[19][68] The Cave of Waves is a themed 2,685-square-metre (28,900 sq ft) wave pool which can generate waves of up to 1.5 metres (4.9 ft) high. Built by Murphy's Waves of Scotland, the pool has a constant temperature of 26 degrees Celsius.[19][69] The Get Wet Surf School makes use of the pool for its lessons outside of normal park operating hours.[70][71][72]

Other facilities

The Beyond the Beach merchandise shop is also the exit from the park.
The Beyond the Beach merchandise shop is also the exit from the park.

In addition to its lineup of attractions, WhiteWater World also has a retail outlet, an events venue, cabanas and several food and beverage outlets.[45][73]

The Beyond the Beach shop, located near the park's entrance, sells surf and WhiteWater World branded merchandise[45]. The shop contains a Kodak photo centre that allows guests to purchase on-ride photos taken on the Super Tubes Hydrocoaster and photographs taken inside the park.[45] Beyond the Beach also serves as the exit gates for the park.[45]

WhiteWater World operates three dining outlets in the peak holiday seasons: Bite Me Cafe, Sandman's Cafe and Bar and Salty's Kiosk[73]. The widest range of meals is available from the Bite Me Cafe which operates all year round[73]. Sandman's Cafe and Bar is a licensed bar where guests can purchase alcoholic drinks and food options including Eagle Boys pizza.[73][74] It is located on the park's western border between the Cave of Waves and the splashdown of The Wedgie[45]. Salty's Kiosk is located next to The BRO and sells slushies, ice creams and other snack foods.[45][73]

Since September 2007, WhiteWater World has hosted an undercover events venue, the largest at an Australian theme park, The Shell. The venue can cater for up to 2000 guests[75] and is located on the southeast corner of WhiteWater World.[45]

From April 2011, WhiteWater World has offered guests the hire of 12 luxury cabanas, located around the park. Each cabana is designed for up to four guests, who have access to deck chairs, couches, a coffee table, an iPod dock, towels and a mini refrigerator.[76][77]

Reception

WhiteWater World's main entrance gates showcase the park's Australian beach culture theme.
WhiteWater World's main entrance gates showcase the park's Australian beach culture theme.

Prior to opening, WhiteWater World was criticised for being built during one of Australia's worst droughts and in an area on Level 5 water restrictions.[2] When designing WhiteWater World, Macquarie Leisure implemented measures to ensure that the park was one of the most water efficient water parks in the world through the minimisation of water loss.[2][32][33]

In October 2008, staff at WhiteWater World stopped Paralympian Steve Simmonds from riding the slides. Simmonds was angry and stated that he felt like he was discriminated against. WhiteWater World cited manufacturer guidelines and safety concerns as the reasons behind the restrictions.[78][79][80]

During the first full year of operation, WhiteWater World attracted more visitors than the expected 450,000 guests. Attendance records show close to 500,000 guests attended the park during that period.[25][26][27]

In a review of several Australian entertainment attractions for The Australian, Scott Podmore rated WhiteWater World 7.5 out of 10, outranking its main competitor Wet'n'Wild Water World, Sea World and UnderWater World. Podmore stated that "WhiteWater World is a wonderful, diverse park offering something for everyone." and that "WhiteWater World is fantastic for a splash, some R&R or some slippery big rides". Podmore highlighted The Rip, The BRO, Little Rippers and Temple of Huey as the park's top attractions.[65]

Before The Wedgie opened in April 2010, several media reporters experienced the ride. Tanya Westthorp of the Gold Coast Bulletin described the ride as "...not for the faint-hearted". She also stated that "...disorientation prevails for a large chunk of the ride, but the thrill is unparalleled to any other waterslide".[42] Phil Lutton of the Brisbane Times wrote that the ride "...is not only the fastest, most exhilarating water ride I've ever tried but it lives up to its name in spades".[46]

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