Six Flags White Water | |
Location: | East Cobb, Georgia, United States |
Coordinates: | 33.9581°N -84.5214°W |
Owner: | Private investors; managed by Six Flags Entertainment Corporation |
Opening Date: | May 1984 |
Season: | May through September |
Area: | 69acres[1] |
Rides: | 20 |
Status: | Operating |
Slogan: | The Southeast's Largest Water Park |
Six Flags White Water is a 69acres water park located northwest of Atlanta, in East Cobb, Georgia. Originally opening in 1984 as White Water Atlanta, the park became part of the Six Flags family of parks in 1999. Today, it is marketed as a second gate to Six Flags Over Georgia, and the two parks often cross-promote each other. In 2012, the park hosted 505,000 visitors, ranking it #12 on the list of the top water parks in North America.
Six Flags White Water was constructed by Silver Dollar City, a theme park company known today as Herschend Family Entertainment, as a corporate sibling to their White Water park in Branson, Missouri and their White Water (Now Hurricane Harbor Oklahoma City) waterpark in Oklahoma, and first opened in 1984. In June 1998, the park was the site of an E. coli outbreak, which sickened at least ten children,[2] including the son of then-Atlanta Braves baseball player Walt Weiss.[3] In May 1999, the park was sold to the group of limited partners that own the nearby Six Flags Over Georgia theme park, with the park becoming "Six Flags White Water," and, like its sister park, being managed by Six Flags Theme Parks.[4] Today, the two parks operate together, despite being roughly 15 miles apart, with each offering promotions for the other.
Six Flags White Water is one of five stand-alone Six Flags water parks, and the only one of the group to not use the Hurricane Harbor name.
In late 2010, Six Flags began the process of removing licensed themes from attractions. They terminated several licenses including their license with The Wiggles. Wiggles Water World was rethemed to Buccaneer Bay in time for the 2011 season.[5] [6]
In July 2011, Six Flags introduced the Flash Pass at Six Flags White Water, and was the first water park in the world to feature the virtual queue system for their water rides.[7] Six Flags White Water was the testing park of the new system and with huge success, nine more Six Flags water parks will be adding the system in 2012.[8] For the 2013 season, White Water added Typhoon Twister, a five-story bowl slide.[9]
In August 2013, Six Flags announced the addition of Hurricane Harbor, a seven-acre water park at Six Flags Over Georgia.[10] When asked about the addition of a new water park when Six Flags already owned one in the area, communications manager Emily Murray replied, "With all the surveys that we’ve seen and the demand for a water park and the growth White Water has shown, White Water is still a large part of Six Flags and [Hurricane Harbor] will complement each other."[10] As part of the same announcement, Six Flags plans to expand White Water's popular "Dive-In Movies" program, where films are shown on a screen to guests in the Atlanta Ocean wave pool, and add a stage at the wave pool for daytime concerts and music events. The stage was completed midway through the 2014 season. Six Flags also announced the creation of their Instagram page that will share photos of guests at White Water. To be featured, guests must use geotag Six Flags White Water. For the 2016 season, White Water added a mat racing slide, Wahoo Racer.
Six Flags White Water is made up of four separate sections, each with a number of attractions. When it first opened, the park consisted of what is today Wildwater Lagoon, Slippery Ridge and Pine Valley. Flash Flood Canyon was added in 1998, prior to the acquisition by Six Flags.
Wildwater Lagoon includes the park's main entrance and its primary services, including Guest Service and First Aid. It is built around an activity pool, which includes splashdown areas for the three Body Flumes, the two Rapids raft flumes, the Mutiny Chute plunge slide and Lizard's Tail kids' slides are also located here. The area's newest attraction is Typhoon Twister, a large water slide that consists of a 67-foot bowl.
Pine Valley is home to the park's wave pool, the Atlanta Ocean, and its lazy river, known as the Little Hooch, named in honor of the nearby Chattahoochee River. Children can play in the Captain Kid's Cove Buccaneer Bay and Treehouse Island play areas, while their older siblings and parents can slide into the giant blue and yellow funnel of Tornado.
In Slippery Ridge, visitors can experience the high-speed Dragon's Tail speed slides, or "compete" on the park's new-for-2016 Wahoo Racer six-lane racing slide tower, which replaces the older 100-Meter Splash slides.[11] Raft riders can enjoy the enclosed Black River Falls and Gulf Coast Screamer slides solo, or share the experience at the Caribbean Plunge. The Bahama Bob-Slide uses large round rafts with up to six riders at once, while the adjacent Tidal Wave body flume lands in a splash pool connected to the Little Hooch lazy river.
Flash Flood Canyon contains the park's tallest single slide, the Dive Bomber, which shares a tower with the Run-A-Way River family raft slide.
Name | Section | Opened | Description | Height Requirement | Thrill Rating |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Activity Pool | Wildwater Lagoon | 1984 | Watery play zone for the smallest kids | Mild | |
Atlanta Ocean Wave Pool | Pine Valley | 1984 | 700,000 gallon wave pool | Mild | |
Bahama Bob Slide | Slippery Ridge | 1991 | Family raft slide | Over 36" | Moderate |
Bermuda Triangle | Slippery Ridge | 1987 | Dual-raft slide | Over 42" | Moderate |
Black River Falls | Slippery Ridge | 1989 | Dark tunnel slide | Over 42" | Moderate |
Body Flumes | Wildwater Lagoon | 1984 | Over 42" | Moderate | |
Buccaneer Bay | Pine Valley | 2010 | Children's pirate-themed splash area | Mild | |
Captain Kid's Cove | Pine Valley | 1992 | Children's pirate-themed splash area | Under 54" | Mild |
Caribbean Plunge | Slippery Ridge | 1987 | Single or Dual raft slide | Over 42" | Moderate |
Dive Bomber (formerly Cliff-Hanger) | Flash Flood Canyon | 1998 | Tallest slide in White Water at 10 stories | Over 54" | Max |
Dragon's Tail | Slippery Ridge | 1984 | Over 48" | Max | |
Gulf Screamer | Slippery Ridge | 1985 | Raft slide - 2-foot drop at the end | Over 42" | Moderate |
Lily Pad Crossing | Wildwater Lagoon | 1984 | Mild | ||
Little Hooch | Pine Valley | 1984 | 1/4 Mile Lazy River | Mild | |
Lizard's Tail | Wildwater Lagoon | 1984 | Kid's version of the Dragon's Tail | Over 42" | Moderate |
Mutiny Chute | Wildwater Lagoon | 1984 | Over 42" | Moderate | |
Run-A-Way River | Flash Flood Canyon | 1998 | Family raft slide | Over 36" | Moderate |
Tornado | Pine Valley | 2004 | Over 48" | Max | |
Tidal Wave | Slippery Ridge | 1990 | Slide ends into the Little Hooch lazy river | Over 42" | Moderate |
Tree House Island | Pine Valley | 1994 | Children's climbing structure & slides | Under 54" | Mild |
Typhoon Twister | Wildwater Lagoon | 2013 | Over 48" | Max | |
Wahoo Racer | Slippery Ridge | 2016 | 6 people race headfirst on mats | Over 42" | Moderate |
Python Plunge | Wildwater Lagoon | 2022 | 5 Story, 2 people tube slide | Over 54" | Maximum |
First opened in 1990, the American Adventures family entertainment center operated next door to White Water, even used the same parking lot. This facility included a number of small scale carnival rides, indoor and outdoor mini-golf, go-carts, games & video arcade, play area, and restaurant. All attractions were geared towards families with small children and originally visitors had to use a series of tickets to use the park (much like the old Disney ticket system.) Eventually visitors paid a single fee to play at the park.
Unlike most parks, American Adventures did not have a gate. Visitors could enter the attraction of their choice simply by walking across the parking lot. White Water maintained a single point of entry and the two promoted each other often, to the point of having a connecting pathway between the open plan of AA and the WW park entrance.
In an attempt to build attendance, the indoor mini golf course was removed to make way for an interactive "theater." Several years later (and for the same reason) the main building's central attraction, an antique carousel, was removed in favor of a four-story foam ball play structure appropriately named "the foam factory."
When Six Flags acquired White Water in 1999, American Adventures was included in the purchase, and the park was considered one of Six Flags' minor parks.
However, in June 2008, the park was leased to a new operator, Zuma Holdings, which no longer co-branded the park with Six Flags White Water. In 2010, American Adventures closed its doors for good, citing "circumstances beyond our control."
After the closing of American Adventures by Zuma Holdings, Six Flags Atlanta Properties took the property back over and now uses the property for trainings, HR, storage and the employee cafeteria. One of the rides, the Scrambler was removed and taken to Six Flags Great Adventure and renamed Déjà Vu in 2012.[12]
See main article: Incidents at Six Flags parks.
March 2016: Two individuals broke into the park, went past three fences, and skateboarded down the Tornado water slide as a half pipe. They were arrested on felony charges of criminal damage to property, causing an estimated $20,000 in damages to the fiberglass coat covering the slide.[13]