Sesame Place San Diego Explained

Sesame Place San Diego
Location:Chula Vista, San Diego County, California, United States
Opening Date: (as Whitewater Canyon)
(as Knott's Soak City U.S.A. – San Diego)
(as Aquatica San Diego)
(as Sesame Place San Diego)
Season:Year-round (currently planned)
Area:17 acres
Status:Operating
Rides:18 (as of April 8, 2022)
Coasters:1 (as of April 8, 2022)
Other Rides:8 (as of April 8, 2022)
Water Rides:10 (as of April 8, 2022)
Shows:Numerous throughout the day and a parade daily with all the characters.
Owner:United Parks & Resorts
Operator:United Parks & Resorts
General Manager:Jim Lake (president)[1]
Slogan:Go Before They Grow
Theme:Sesame Street
Previous Names:Whitewater Canyon (1997–2000)
Knott's Soak City U.S.A.- San Diego (2000–2013)
Aquatica San Diego (2013–2021)
Homepage:Sesame Place San Diego Home Page

Sesame Place San Diego is a children's theme park and water park in Chula Vista, California. It is owned and operated by United Parks & Resorts, which operates the park under an exclusive license from Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit owner of Sesame Street.

It is the first theme park in the world to open as a certified autism center by the International Board of Credentialing and Continuing Education Standards (IBCCES). Sesame Place Philadelphia in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was the first theme park in the world to be a certified autism center.[2]

History

As a water park

Sesame Place San Diego originally opened on May 31, 1997, as White Water Canyon, being operated independently. At the time it featured 16 water slides and a wave pool, with a western theme applied to it.[3] The park suffered from many management and construction problems, and the poor attendance led to the park filing for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy in June 1998.[4]

In December 1999, Cedar Fair purchased the park from its original owners for $11.5 million.[5] Under its new ownership, Cedar Fair gave the park a new beach-theme and a rename to Knott's Soak City U.S.A. for its reopening on May 27, 2000.[6] [7]

On November 20, 2012, Cedar Fair announced it had sold the park to SeaWorld Parks & Entertainment.[8] The acquisition saw the park transformed into a 32acres water park named Aquatica San Diego. The refurbished park reopened on June 1, 2013.[9] [10] It features a wide array of attractions for all ages and swimming abilities, one of which passes by a flamingo habitat. The water park was featured on the episode, "Appalachian Splashin" on Xtreme Waterparks.

As Sesame Place San Diego

In 2017, Sesame Workshop announced that a new Sesame Place park would open "no later than" mid-2021.[11] The location of the new park was soon revealed in 2019 when SeaWorld announced that Aquatica San Diego would be re-branded as Sesame Place San Diego park for the 2021 season. The Sesame Street-themed park would feature tame roller coasters, carousels and other family-friendly rides, the street made famous on TV, a parade, live shows, character interactions, and other attractions. The park retained the Aquatica water attractions into the new park, although one of the rides, "HooRoo Run", was removed for being deemed too extreme for the retheming.[12]

Construction took place in phases, allowing Aquatica to remain open for the time period. The park's opening was soon delayed to 2022, due to the COVID-19 pandemic halting construction. Aquatica soon closed for its final season on September 12, 2021, and the remains of the park were transformed into Sesame Place San Diego.

In November 2021, it was confirmed that the newly themed park would open in March 2022.[13] The park opened on the 26th of that month.[14]

Attractions

As the park was originally a water park, Sesame Place San Diego contains mostly water attractions, but with its retheming, several dry attractions are included as well.

Dry Attractions

Name Opened Description Manufacturer
Abby's Fairy Flight 2022 A Chairswing Ride. Zamperla
Cookie Climb 2022 Two mini climbing towers, one Cookie Monster themed, the other is Cookie themed. The guest pulls themselves up in a chair and the ride drops the chair slowly. Sunkid
Elmo's Rockin' Rockets 2022 An Aerial-Carousel Ride. Zamperla
Rosita's Harmony Hills 2022 A play area.
Rub-A-Dub Sub 2022 A Crazy Bus ride themed after a Submarine. Zamperla
Sesame Street Soar and Spin 2022 A Samba Balloon ride. Zamperla
Sunny Day Carousel 2022 A Carousel. Chance Rides
2022 A Super Grover-themed junior coaster. It is a clone of Air Grover at Busch Gardens Tampa Bay. Zierer
In addition to the rides, a replica of Sesame Street called "Sesame Street Neighborhood" is also featured,[15] alongside photo ops with many Sesame Street characters.[16]

Water Attractions

Name Opened Description Former names
Bert's Topsy Turvy Tunnels TBC Three 60-foot-tall double-inner-tube slides. Two enclosed and one open air. Kiwi Curl (Aquatica)
Palisades Plunge (Soak City)
Big Bird's Beach 1997 A 550,000-gallon wave pool. Big Surf Shores (Aquatica)
Balboa Bay (Soak City)
Big Bird's Rambling River 1997 Loggerhead Lane (Aquatica)
Sunset River (Soak City)
Cookie's Monster Mixer 2005 A 75-foot-tall ProSlide Tornado water slide that drops 60 feet (23 m) into a large six-story funnel. Tassie's Twister (Aquatica)
Pacific Spin (Soak City)
Elmo's Silly Sand Slides 1997 A play area designed for children featuring smaller slides. Slippity Dippity (Aquatica)
Tykes Trough (Soak City)
Ernie's Twisty Turny Tunnels 1997 Three 60-foot-tall, single-inner-tube slides. Two enclosed and one open air. Woohoo Falls (Aquatica)
Solana Storm Watch Tower (Soak City)
Honker Dinger Dash 2014 A six-lane racing slide with guests sliding down on mats through enclosed and open sections. Taumata Racer (Aquatica)
Oscar's Rotten Rafts 2000 A 78-foot-tall four-person family raft water slide. Walhalla Wave (Aquatica)
Coronado Express (Soak City)
Snuffy's Spaghetti Slides 1997 A 60-foot-tall water slide complex with six body slides, four enclosed and two open air. Whanau Way (Aquatica)
Imperial Run (Soak City)
The Count's Splash Castle 2023 A ProSlide RideHOUSE. It replaced the previous The Count's Splash Castle. The new structure is a multi-level, interactive water-play attraction that features 4 water slides, 111 play elements, including three giant tipping buckets that dump over 1,300 gallons of water combined. [17]

Former Attractions

Name Opened RemovedDescription Former names
The Count's Splash Castle 1997 2023 A four-story interactive, area that features two slides, hoses, jets, geysers, and a 500-gallon bucket that unloads every five minutes. The attraction was removed for the 2023 season, and was replaced with a larger and better version. Walkabout Waters and Kata's Kookaburra Cove (Aquatica)
Dick's Beach House and Gremmie Lagoon (Soak City)
HooRoo Run 1997 2019 An 80-foot-tall speed slide with two open-air and two enclosed slides. It was removed after the 2019 season, as the slide's drop and speed were deemed too extreme for the Sesame Place retheming. The ride also suffered from maintenance issues and frequent downtime during Aquatica’s last several seasons. La Jolla Falls (Soak City)

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: "Big Bird and Elmo call San Diego home as Sesame Place opens this weekend". March 22, 2022. April 8, 2022. San Diego Union Tribune.
  2. |Web site: Sesame Place San Diego Sensory guide. April 8, 2022 . SeaWorld Parks and Entertainment. 6.
  3. News: Making a Splash in Chula Vista. https://archive.today/20130201002420/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/11772577.html?dids=11772577:11772577&FMT=CITE&FMTS=CITE:FT&type=current&date=May+18,+1997&author=&pub=Los+Angeles+Times&desc=Making+a+Splash+in+Chula+Vista&pqatl=google. dead. February 1, 2013. November 30, 2012. Los Angeles Times. May 18, 1997.
  4. Web site: White Water Canyon in Chula Vista Facing Foreclosure After Two Seasons. February 3, 1999.
  5. News: Cedar Fair completes water-park acquisition. November 30, 2012. Toledo Blade. December 8, 1999.
  6. News: Gale. Elaine. Knott's Job Fair Attracts Hundreds. https://archive.today/20130201053501/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/51239862.html?dids=51239862:51239862&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Mar+19,+2000&author=ELAINE+GALE&pub=Los+Angeles+Times&desc=Knott's+Job+Fair+Attracts+Hundreds;+Workers+are+needed+for+two+Soak+City+USA+water+parks.+The+company+seeks+mostly+older+teens--but+leave+the+body+art+at+home.&pqatl=google. dead. February 1, 2013. November 30, 2012. Los Angeles Times. March 19, 2000.
  7. Web site: Soak City Begins Year with Promotion. May 21, 2000 .
  8. Web site: Weisberg . Lori . Soak City to become a SeaWorld water park . November 20, 2012 . November 20, 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140726224508/http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2012/nov/20/soak-city-to-become-a-seaworld-water-park/ . July 26, 2014 .
  9. News: MacDonald. Brady. 32 best new theme park additions for 2013. December 27, 2012. Los Angeles Times. December 26, 2012.
  10. News: MacDonald. Brady. SeaWorld bringing Aquatica water park to San Diego. December 16, 2012. Los Angeles Times. November 21, 2012.
  11. Web site: Press Releases | Sesame Workshop. www.sesameworkshop.org. December 15, 2022 .
  12. Web site: SeaWorld plans a new Sesame Place theme park in Chula Vista. October 21, 2019.
  13. Web site: Sesame Place San Diego on Track to Open March 2022. Take a Peek at the Rides.
  14. Web site: Summerville . Krista . March 22, 2022 . The first Sesame Street theme park on the West Coast opens in San Diego . 2022-04-03 . KGTV . en.
  15. Web site: Sesame Street Neighborhood | Sesame Place San Diego .
  16. Web site: Sesame Street Meet & Greets | Sesame Place San Diego .
  17. https://www.inparkmagazine.com/the-counts-splash-castle-opens-at-sesame-place-san-diego/