Water World, Stoke-on-Trent
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Waterworld is a
water park A water park (or waterpark, water world) is an amusement park that features water play areas such as swimming pools, water slides, splash pads, water playgrounds, and lazy rivers, as well as areas for floating, bathing, swimming, and other baref ...
located in Festival Park, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire,
England England is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. It shares land borders with Wales to its west and Scotland to its north. The Irish Sea lies northwest and the Celtic Sea to the southwest. It is separated from continental Europe b ...
. The park attracts 400,000 visitors per year. The park first opened in 1989 and is generally open year-round, but is closed for a few days of the week during term time however is open most days.


History

In 1999 Mo Chaudry's family trust bought Water World from Rank Leisure for £1.5m, at the time the park was operating at a loss. Early in the 21st century WaterWorld began turning profits. In summer 2019, four new rides came to Waterworld as part of their 30th anniversary, and Stormchaser and Hurricane opened on 21 August, while the other two, Thunderbolt and Cyclone, opened a few days later on 24 August. The tallest rides in Tornado Alley overtake the Twister and become the tallest rides in the park.


Rides

The park's rides and attractions include: Thunderbolt, cyclone, hurricane, stormchaser, Black Hole, The Nucleus, Space Bowl, Super Flume, Twister, Python, Rapids, Medium Sized Flumes, Toddler Slides, Bubble Pools, Outdoor Pool (seasonal), Interactive Jungle House, The Lily pads, Racing Slides, Wave Pool, Toddler Slide and the Assault Course.


The Nucleus

The Nucleus is an indoor water rollercoaster which transports the ride participant through 375 feet of ups and downs in a rubber ring. The height limit is 1.1 metres. After the rider climbs the stairs and collects a rubber ring, a lifeguard pushes them off. A blaster boosts them into a tunnel, after which there is a drop to a second blaster and tunnel, and finally a drop to a water blaster which slows the rider down and, if there's a queue, the ring is handed off to another person.The raft you use on the waterslide cannot be used on any tornado alley waterslide.


Space Bowl

The Space Bowl is UFO themed, formed into a spiral leading to a drop into a 2-meter tub of water. It is limited to riders who are strong swimmers because it is possible to drop out of the spiral head first.


Rapids

The rapids is a water-flowing feature in a circle shape.


Twister

The Twister was the tallest flume at Waterworld until 2019 when four new rides (Stormchaser, Hurricane, Cyclone and Thunderbolt) were built for Waterworld's 30th anniversary. Goggles are not permitted to be worn on the ride. After climbing to a high platform, the rider slides down a tube and around corners at fast speed, with mini water effects along the way. The rider creates a wave of water that falls into a pool beneath the exit. At the end a sign asks the rider to hurry to the exit in order to speed up operating times. A skull at the entrance was removed in 2017 speed of 22 Mph.


The Three Flumes

The Three Flumes are the Super Flume, Python and Black Hole. They are next-door to each other and they end up in the same pool. The pool depth is 1.2m.


Tornado Alley

Tornado Alley opened in 2019 (the parks 30th anniversary) and consisted of four new rides: Stormchaser, Hurricane, Cyclone and Thunderbolt. Thunderbolt is the tallest waterslide you can find in the uk, at a height of 55ft tall. It is also the fastest at 40kmh (25mph). Another exciting ride in tornado alley is Cyclone. It brings you down a dark tube with light effects, and soon into a cylindrical room. It rocks from side-to-side, until reaching a fast tube, leading into a cyclone, the raft makes a circle around, then soon falls into the middle. This then leads to the end of the waterslide. Hurricane and storm chaser are much more simple, as they are just normal slides; storm chaser with a raft and hurricane without.


References

{{Stoke-on-Trent 1989 establishments in England Buildings and structures in Stoke-on-Trent Tourist attractions in Staffordshire Water parks in the United Kingdom Tourist attractions in Stoke-on-Trent