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Most Insane Banned Waterslides You Can’t Go On Anymore

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Top 20 Most Insane Banned Waterslides You Can’t Go On Anymore. These water slides can be extremely dangerous in opposition to the thrill they provide. Notably, many cases have been registered against world-popular water slides for being responsible for people’s […]

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Most Insane Banned Waterslides You Can’t Go On Anymore

Top 20 Most Insane Banned Waterslides You Can’t Go On Anymore. These water slides can be extremely dangerous in opposition to the thrill they provide. Notably, many cases have been registered against world-popular water slides for being responsible for people’s miseries. Many of them have been banned because of their hazardous construction. Here are 20 of the most insane water slides that got banned due to the danger that they posed to the riders:

 

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Calypso:

Canada’s largest themed water park. Steamer slide was the reason the waterpark faced a large number of lawsuits over claims of injuries. The charges related to the incidents that happened way back in 2011 and 2012. Out of 20 charges the waterpark faced, 14 were related to three separate incidents involving the infamous steamer slide, as one man suffered a fractured skull. One woman’s stoop hit the wall at the end of the slide; numerous people reported suffering neck injuries, and at one point, two tubes even crashed. The steamer slide was eventually banned and had to be shut down by the waterpark.

 


©kalahariresorts.com

 

Sahara Sidewinders ride:

At the Kalahari resort in Wisconsin Dells, the 60-foot-tall indoor water slide drop riders from a trapdoor chamber into one of two looping slides advertises the only indoor looping most dangerous water slides in the nation. When they were added to the park in 2011, they were called the first of their kind in the world. Such innovations always come with a fair share of concerns that proved to be justified when a teenager was injured while riding the waterslide. With so many lawsuits and safety violations piling up, the waterslide had to be closed down by the resort in the end.

 

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Kansas City Water Park: 

Over 51 meters, or 168 feet and 7 inches, the water park became the world’s tallest waterslide when it opened in 2014, and with the length of 183 meters, or 601 feet, it is also among the longest slides, and it is definitely one of the craziest rides, which is hardly surprising considering it is literally called crazy or insane! On August 7th, 2016, the ten-year-old son of Kansas state representative Scott Schwab died while riding. Two other passengers, both women, were injured in the incident, with one suffering a broken jaw while the other suffered a facial bone fracture and needed stitches.

 


©whitewaterwest.com

 

Aqua sphere:

The troubled water slide at the Peninsula aquatic recreational center in Australia was closed up once but two times, with the first time being even before the facility officially opened since Park is owned by Frankston Council. A closed session was held for its staff and their families in 2014. According to an eyewitness, a boy aged about 7 was lying lifeless on the ground after being thrown out of the tube and knocked around inside the slide. The boy’s father and older brother rushed to his aid, but the unfortunate kid blacked out for nearly 15 minutes.

 


©travelwires.com

 

Kilimanjaro:

The unique factor is that it’s the world’s tallest slide and a banned waterslide you can’t ride anymore.

Aldeia das Aguas Park Resort is in Rodovia, about 85 miles northwest of Rio de Janeiro. At 49.9 m high—12 m higher than the city’s Christ the Redeemer statue—this is not only the world’s tallest slide; it’s also reportedly the fastest, with a record speed of 57 mph. I won’t ride this for free, do you?

 


©nypost.com

 

Lake Dolores Waterpark:

In the early 1970s, the site had become a popular water park for the general public. However, attendance tapered off by the late 1980s, and the park closed. It reopened in 1998 as a 1950s-themed water park called Rock-A-Hoola. The retro-inspired Renaissance was unfortunately short-lived—aan after-hours accident that allegedly made an employee a paraplegic was just one factor in Rock-A-Hoola’s downfall. The park had its last hurrah between 2002 and 2004 under the name Discovery Waterpark.

 


©allears.net

 

Disney’s River Country:

River Country, Walt Disney World’s first water park, opened in 1976. Along with Discovery Island, it was one of two Disney parks to close permanently. The once-thriving water park, which shut down for good in 2001, has become overrun with weeds and moss in the years since its closure.
Despite its defunct status, River Country’s mystique attracts urban explorers and photographers seeking to investigate the site’s forlorn grounds.

 


©worldabandoned.com

 

L’Aquatic Paradis:

Located in Spain’s Catalonia region, L’Aquatic Paradis opened in the early 1990s. After two years, a tragic accident—rrumor has it that a child was pulled under water by the engine of a wave machine—aand large sums of debt forced the water park to close its doors. After shutting down, the decaying park became a counterculture hub. While graffiti artists left their colorful mark on slides and buildings, skaters practiced tricks in the empty pools.

 


©heartpatrick.com

 

Safari Lagoon Waterpark: 

Safari Lagoon is located on the rooftop of a shopping center and was billed as one of Southeast Asia’s largest theme parks when it opened in 1998. Two factors resulted in the water park’s eventual closure in 2007. In addition to authorities learning that Safari Lagoon had been operating without a license for eight years, an employee was reportedly ruining his life after being trapped in a high-pressure water pump compartment.

 


©touristplaces.info

 

Cannonball Falls at Action Park:

Action Park, which gained the infamous nickname “Traction Park” for the high number of injuries reported there in the 1980s and 1990s, continues to top the list as the New Jersey amusement park with the most reported injuries. Cannonball Falls—an enclosed water slide that ends with a 10-foot drop into a mountain pool—ranks as the ride with the highest number of reported injuries at both the park and in the state.

 


©reddit.com

 

Zoom Floom Waterpark

The theme park was once a popular summer destination for families around the area in Bloomington, Indiana. It’s not well documented why the attraction closed, but it was likely due to insurance and safety concerns. Now it sits abandoned in the woods right off of State Road 446 and is covered in colorful graffiti. The lot is for sale, and there is a small fence around the slide; however, it’s still visible and makes for an interesting art space. It was closed down sometime after the 80s.

 


©twistedsifter.com

 

Insano Water Slide

This is one of the tallest waterslides in the world. This thing is a whopping 41 meters in height; that’s the same as a 14-story building, so it was bound to have terrible injuries associated with it. Riders experience speed over 65 miles per hour on their revering way down to the bottom. They say it’s so steep that your body barely touches the slide; you’re like floating in midair most of the ride. So officially, this scariest waterslide got close in on August 7, 2016.

 


©tripadvisor.com

 

Black Hole

It has been the target of several law suits, all fought by several people who were severely injured while riding this life-risking trap. After an injury, a man had to have metal plates fixed into the back of his neck. It was founded in 1977 by SeaWorld creator George Millay. It closed on December 31, 2016. Owned and operated by Universal Parks & Resorts, Volcano Bay replaced Wet ‘n Wild as Universal Orlando Resort’s water park, and it was the first constructed by Universal itself.

 


©wxyz.com

 

Cedar Point

Riders get to go down a massive slide while on a raft, with up to ten people fitting on one raft. The ride was decided to be one of the worst injuries and incidents in waterslides history. The ride was being pulled to the top of the hill when it malfunctioned; the raft was sent hurdling back down the hill before flipping upside down. One day the most dangerous thing happened. 10 people were stuck in their seats, trapped under water with no way out, and got close on September 15, 2015.

 


©yelp.com

 

Fort Mill, South Carolina

Televangelists Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker opened their Christian amusement park—ccomplete with Water Park—in 1978. In 1987, fellow TV preacher Jerry Falwell took a plunge down the 163-foot-long Typhoon slide, wearing a suit and tie. A picture of Falwell’s fully clothed slide was named one of the top 100 national photos of the century by the Associated Press in 1999. Alas, Heritage USA had been closed for a decade by then.

 

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©princessturnedmom.com

 

Irvine, California

Orange County kids of a certain age undoubtedly recall this most dangerous water park—aand perhaps have the scars to prove it. The Edge and Ledge rides were shut down in 2003, and tales of people getting stuck in tubes. Wild Rivers closed in 2011 for the expiration of its lease with The Irvine Company. But it’s not all bad news! Since the closure, there have been plans to recreate Wild Rivers in Irvine on or near the Orange County Great Park, which have been under development.

 


©vogue.com

 

Vietnam Waterpark

Ho Thuy Tien opened in 2004 and cost about three million US dollars to build. It closed not too long afterwards, and everything that had been built on the site had just been left as it was. Abandoned. It was a complex of entertaining areas, including an aquarium, a water park, yachting, and a restaurant. However, at the end of 2011, people decided to close it because of the low efficiency. From then till now, it has been abandoned because no one invested to rebuild it or carry out a new project in that area.

 


©theculturetrip.com

 

Macassar Beach Pavilion

Macassar Beach Pavilion in Cape Town, South Africa, was built in 1991 on South Africa’s False Bay coast. Macassar Beach Pavilion is located within a 2,760-acre conservation area dedicated to safeguarding the area’s sand dunes and endemic fynbos. South-Easter winds and shifting dunes have caused sand to encroach upon the park’s fading blue and green structures. The result is an otherworldly landscape that intrigues photographers and sightseers alike. Before it was abandoned due to financial trouble, the Pavilion used to be a popular resort.

 

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Ebenezer Wonderful Water Slides

When Ebenezer Floppen Slopper’s Wonderful Water Slides opened in the early 1980s, the park provided a thrilling alternative to front-law sprinklers for kids in the Chicago suburb of Oakbrook Terrace. Closed in 1989 for unknown reasons, this former landfill returned to its garbage-strewn roots. Today, the water park is totally abandoned and decrepit. So mainly the park closed for good at the end of the 1989 season for unknown reasons. Neglected and abandoned since, the slides and wading pool have fallen into ruin.
Water Wonderland
Financial woes—tthe park filed for bankruptcy in the ’90s—aand a subsequent lawsuit that said a child was injured on a ride—Water Wonderland closed its doors. In 2018, the park was sold, and plans were made for the site to reopen as a new water park. However, the park still remains under construction today. Water Wonderland changed hands before shuttering once and for all in 2003.

Which is the most tragic? Do you want to visit any of them? Let us know in the comment section.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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