Is there a concern to what this will do to White Water Bay? Not sure how two very similar parks within miles of each other can co-exist?
Is there a concern to what this will do to White Water Bay? Not sure how two very similar parks within miles of each other can co-exist?
Keep in mind, there will be many more places that want dollars from visitors: arcade, axe-throwing, escape room, tons of restaurants and bars, retail shops, a huge spa, the hotel, the huge lagoon, the museum itself...
Okana will need to attract tons of people well beyond the indoor waterpark.
BTW, regarding the river being drained, I had assumed the City would haul tail to get the pedestrian bridge complete so they could refill the water and commence rowing activities on that section; all the boathouses are now out of commission except OU which is farther west.
But, they are also going to be constructing the new riverboat landing, so the river is likely to stay empty for a while.
Cincinnati has their Great Wolf Lodge right next to Soak City (Kings Island) and they both are booming so much that KI expanded. They used to have a third water park across the interstate called the Beach. He didn't make it, but they had a big water leak issue and management changed hands and so on. So it can very well be done successfully.
This is a good question, and I also wonder if this will impact Frontier City as well. It'll be interesting to see if the Six Flags properties push for new attractions/rides or find other ways to compete with this, or if this market is indeed big enough to keep all these amusement places active.
Tulsa not having anything of this same caliber definitely helps as well.
I don't think it will affect WWB or FC much at all. This is a much more fancy resort that will be more of a destination for slightly upper end clientele, whereas WWB is a locals' water park. The OKC metro could support a third water park pretty easily anyway. We are actually starved for entertainment properties in this state. It's not like WWB is that big. FC is tiny and Six Flags barely puts any effort into that place besides general maintenance and swapping out old rides with old rides from other SF parks.
The Vinita park will have a far greater impact on the OKC parks. Hopefully that one kicks some competition up a bit.
yes, I do hope Six Flags will insert some more life into the 2 OKC parks. OKC is on a roll so they hopefully will show up and compete.
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
I drove by this on I-40 today and it's a massive development. Appreciate it more in person.
Oklahoma River To Be Drained To Build Pedestrian Bridge
News 9
https://www.news9.com › story › oklahoma-river-to-b...
Jun 20, 2023 — The river will be drained from November to March. “You open the dam, and the water goes,” said Mike Knopp – Executive Director of Riversport
Hopefully it will be completed in 5 months ?
^
Let's hope everything goes to plan and it reopens after only 5 months.
Even that is a long time for the rowers to be out of the water.
^^^^^^^^^
Rowing continues in the Western basin, where they have a more modest boathouse facility. Also at Overholser.
Riversport owns that boathouse, not OU, who is simply a tenant. While OU had fully taken over the building due to the size of their program, as a Riversport partner they were quick to assist with a temporary solution. Riversport made arrangements with OU to co-locate during bridge construction/river draining. Due to the fact that mostly only larger boats will be used during cold weather, multiple smaller boats were relocated to make room.
Riversport also relocated half of its flatwater operation to Overholser; for example, UCO is rowing at Exchange while OCU is rowing at Lake Overholser. Riversport also worked with EMBARK to place more of their coaching launches in EMBARK’s inlet, and have moved boats around to accommodate practices in winter months.
They will even continue to do a national level camp over the winter utilizing Exchange and the indoor facilities in the Boathouse district.
I know your question was a sarcastic one, but my original post was 100% accurate.
IIRC technically the city owns the land/buildings downtown and at exchange, who have a long term partnership with the Boathouse Foundation on the operation of facilities. Not as sure on the ones at Overholser since those are from the OAR era (Oklahoma Association of Rowing), and at least from stories I have heard around the time the low water dams downtown went in was when they made major contacts within the city and chamber of commerce.
If it wasn’t, I apologize. The way your post read to me was dismissive of the idea that Riversport could possibly be operating out of that building due to OU’s presence. I also felt the suggestion that the only way rowing could be happening there was if rowers transported their ~30’, 44’ or 62’ rowing shells to that basin anytime they wanted/needed row was intentionally silly, in order to make a point. Again, sorry if I read that wrong, but if it wasn’t sarcastic I have no idea how else to read it.
Happy to talk more about Riversport in the Riversport thread.
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