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Splashtown USA opened to the public shortly after. In the 1990s, the park changed owners twice: first to the Morris Family in 1994, and then to Six Flags in May 1999. The acquisition was made by Six Flags to eliminate the park from being a competitor to its Six Flags WaterWorld water park, also located in Houston. [3] The park was renamed Six ...
The park was sold to private investors and the SplashTown USA water park was built in its place; the water park was sold again to Bryant Morris, then to Six Flags which purchased it in 1999. After initially not wanting to brand and call it "a member of the Six Flags family," Six Flags eventually decided to re-brand it as Six Flags SplashTown.
Splashtown is a name used by the following water parks in the United States: Splashtown at Darien Lake, a water park at Six Flags Darien Lake in Darien, New York now operating as Six Flags Hurricane Harbor; SplashTown Houston, a water park in Spring, Texas now operating as Six Flags Hurricane Harbor SplashTown
In 1999, Six Flags St. Louis was the first Six Flags park to construct its own intra-park water attractions section. [2] As Six Flags acquired and rebranded parks in the 2000s, some existing water parks within these theme parks were later upgraded and rebranded as Hurricane Harbor.
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; SplashTown Waterpark Houston
Pacific Park (2018–present) [13] Rapids Water Park (2012–present) [5] Valcartier Outdoor Water Park (2022–present) Valcartier Indoor Bora Parc (2022–present) Wet'n'Wild Hawaii (2014–present) [4] Wild Waves Theme Park (2017–present) [14] Operated for Kroenke Entertainment. Elitch Gardens (2013–present) [6] Operated for Bowlero ...
A thermal water park in Bešeňová, Slovakia. The following is a list of notable water parks in the world sorted by region. A water park or waterpark is an amusement park that features water play areas, such as water slides, splash pads, spraygrounds (water playgrounds), lazy rivers, wave pools, or other recreational bathing, swimming, and barefooting environments.
Demolished and replaced by Wet 'n' Wild Splashtown International Wildlife Park Grand Prairie: 1971–1992 Joyland Amusement Park: Lubbock: 1940s–2022 Kiddie Wonderland Houston: 1930s-early 1990s Luna Park: Houston: 1924–1934 Magic Landing: El Paso: 1984–1988 Penny Whistle Park Dallas: 1967–1995 Peppermint Park: Houston, Friendswood