enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. U.S. National Whitewater Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._National_Whitewater...

    Long: 19 m 3 /s (670 cu ft/s) center.whitewater.org. The U.S. National Whitewater Center (USNWC) is a not-for-profit outdoor recreation and athletic training facility for whitewater rafting, kayaking, canoeing, rock climbing, mountain biking, hiking and ice skating which opened to the public in 2006. [1] The Center is located in Charlotte ...

  3. Tees Barrage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tees_Barrage

    The Tees Barrage comprises a river barrage, road bridge, footbridge, barge lock, fish pass and access point to a white water course. The waters above the barrage are permanently held at the level of an average high tide and are used for watersports such as canoeing, jet skiing, dragonboat racing and incorporates a 1 km rowing course.

  4. Dickerson Whitewater Course - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dickerson_Whitewater_Course

    Midpoint of the 900-foot-long course. The Dickerson Whitewater Course, on the Potomac River near Dickerson, Maryland, was built for use by canoe and kayak paddlers training for the 1992 Olympic Games in Spain. It was the first pump-powered artificial whitewater course built in North America, and is still the only one anywhere with heated water.

  5. Loyola University Chicago Quinlan School of Business

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loyola_University_Chicago...

    In fall 2015, Quinlan opened the doors on its new building in downtown Chicago. The building, at State and Pearson on Loyola's Water Tower Campus, was named the John and Kathy Schreiber Center in recognition of a $10 million gift from the Schreiber family. John Schreiber earned his undergraduate degree from Quinlan in 1968. [3]

  6. Water tower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_tower

    Water tower - Wikipedia ... Water tower

  7. List of artificial whitewater courses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_artificial...

    The first whitewater slalom race took place on the Aar River in Switzerland in 1933. [1] The early slalom courses were all set in natural rivers, but when whitewater slalom became an Olympic sport for the first time, at the 1972 Munich Games, the venue was the world's first concrete-channel artificial whitewater course, the Eiskanal in Augsburg.

  8. Union Watersphere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Union_Watersphere

    Another tower in Oklahoma, built in 1986 and billed as the largest water tower in the country, is 218 ft (66 m) tall, can hold 500,000 US gallons (1,900 m 3), and is located in Edmond. [15] [16] The Earthoid, a nearly spherical tank located in Germantown, Maryland is 100 ft (30 m) tall and holds 2,000,000 US gallons (7,600 m 3) gallons of water ...

  9. Water Cube - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_Cube

    The renovation divided the facility into three pool areas (a main pool, Olympic "demonstration" pool, and a training pool), as well as the 12,000 m 2 (130,000 sq ft) water park area. [ 23 ] [ 24 ] In July 2013, the Water Cube introduced a new LED light show on its exterior, "Nature and Man in Rhapsody of Light", by artist Jennifer Wen Ma and ...