Palm Springs Surf Club Explained

Palm Springs Surf Club
Location:Palm Springs
Location2:California
Location3:United States
Owner:Pono Acquisition Partners I, LLC [1]
Previous Names:Oasis Water Park (1986–2000)
Knott's Oasis Water Park (2001)
Knott's Soak City (2002–2013)
Wet'n'Wild Palm Springs (2014–2018)
Area:21acres
Homepage:https://palmspringssurfclub.com/

Palm Springs Surf Club is a surf club located in Palm Springs, California. The park operated under Cedar Fair's ownership as Knott's Soak City until 2013 when CNL Lifestyle Properties acquired it and changed the name to Wet'n'Wild Palm Springs. In 2019, the park was acquired by Pono Acquisition Partners I, LLC.[2] The park opened in 2024.[3]

History

Palm Springs Surf Club officially opened as Oasis Water Park by Waterpark Associates in 1986.[4] By 2001, Oasis Water Park spanned of a 21acres property, featured 20 attractions and had a seasonal attendance of 200,000 people.[5] In May 2001, Cedar Fair entered into an agreement to acquire the park.[6] The deal was finalised one month later for $9.1 million. The park was immediately branded Knott's Oasis Water Park, with additional advertising driving revenues for the remainder of the year. At the conclusion of the 2001 season Cedar Fair reported the park was down 13% at the time of acquisition, however, this was turned around to a 13% increase by the end of the season under the park's new owners.[7]

In the 2001-2002 winter off-season, Cedar Fair invested $2 million into refurbishing and rebranding the park into a Knott's Soak City park, joining other locations in Chula Vista and Buena Park. The refurbishment included the park's gas chlorine sanitation system being replaced by a liquid chlorine equivalent, as well as the repainting and renaming of all slides to match the other Soak City parks. A Rain Fortress aqua play area by WhiteWater West was also added to the park, which reopened in March 2002. The renovation of the park saw increases in attendance and revenue of "about 40%" in the 2002 season.[8]

On August 14, 2013, Cedar Fair announced it had sold its Palm Springs Soak City to CNL Lifestyle Properties. The park was allowed to operate under the Soak City name for the until the conclusion of the 2013 season.[9] In November 2013, CNL Lifestyle Properties completed their acquisition of the ownership and operational rights of Wet'n'Wild Hawaii and Wet'n'Wild Phoenix. As part of the transaction with Australian firm, Village Roadshow Theme Parks, CNL also acquired rights to the Wet'n'Wild brand in the United States.[10] [11] [12] In December 2013, CNL announced the Palm Springs water park would operate as Wet'n'Wild Palm Springs from the 2014 season.[13] In January 2019, the park was acquired by Pono Acquisition Partners I, LLC and was set to reopen in 2021, however the opening was delayed until 2024 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In popular culture

The opening scenes of the 1987 film "North Shore" were filmed at the Oasis Water Park wave tank. In the film, the wave tank location where the surf contest takes place was actually depicted as Arizona.

In June 2019, shortly before demolition commenced[14] at Wet'n'Wild Palm Springs, professional skateboarders including Lizzie Armanto, Omar Hassan, Riley Hawk, Tony Hawk, Aaron Homoki, Kevin Kowalski, Torey Pudwill and Daewon Song spent a week filming in the closed park to create a nine-minute viral video for Thrasher Magazine entitled "High 'N' Dry".[15] [16]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Wet N' Wild Palm Springs sold; will be closed for 2019 season. 2019-01-12.
  2. Web site: Daniels . Melissa . Palm Springs Surf Club moves forward after planning commission approval . 2023-12-17 . The Desert Sun . en-US.
  3. Web site: Howell . August . 2023-12-13 . After Four Years And $80 Million, California’s First Realistically Affordable Wave Pool Is Set To Open In 2024 . 2023-12-17 . Stab Mag . en-US.
  4. O'Brien. Tim. Knott's Soak City blooms in desert. Amusement Business. 1 April 2002. 114. 13. 1, 8.
  5. Emmons. Natasha. Deckard, Linda . Muret, Don . Barbieri, Kelly . Late news. Amusement Business. 4 June 2001. 113. 22. 1.
  6. O'Brien. Tim. Cedar Fair to add an oasis. Amusement Business. 21 May 2001. 113. 20. 21.
  7. O'Brien. Tim. Zoltak, James . Miller, Keith . Waterparks: Season in review. Amusement Business. 8 October 2001. 113. 40. 18, 20.
  8. O'Brien. Tim. Miller, Keith . Waterparks: Season in review. Amusement Business. 7 October 2002. 114. 40. 3, 8+.
  9. Cedar Fair Sells Palm Springs Water Park To CNL Lifestyle Properties, Inc.. 24 November 2013. 14 August 2013. Market Watch.
  10. News: Hawaiian Waters sold, to be renamed Wet 'n' Wild Hawaii. 23 November 2013. Pacific Business News. 7 May 2009.
  11. News: Silverstein. Stephanie. Premier Parks to take over operation of Wet 'n' Wild Hawaii. 23 November 2013. Pacific Business News. 21 November 2013.
  12. News: Shanklin. Mary. CNL buys Wet 'n Wild Phoenix. 24 November 2013. Orlando Sentinel. 21 November 2013.
  13. News: Descant. Skip. Knott's Soak City to become Wet 'n' Wild Palm Springs. 29 December 2013. The Desert Sun. 17 December 2013.
  14. Web site: Photos: Work underway on Palm Springs Surf Club surf park. Desert Sun. en. 2020-01-13.
  15. Web site: High 'N' Dry. 23 July 2019. Thrasher Magazine. YouTube. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20190726233350/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xVdnjfiGXz4. 26 July 2019. 1 January 2020.
  16. Web site: Film showcases shuttered Palm Springs Wet 'n' Wild as 'skateboarder's dream'. Blueskye. Brian. Desert Sun. en. 2020-01-13.