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Making waves in Spain: takeaways from Waterpark Day 2025

Large group posing outside near a red building and green slide in a tropical setting.

by Nancy Patterson, OpenAire

At this year’s IAAPA Expo Europe in Barcelona, I attended Waterpark Day, hosted by Water World in Lloret de Mar, Spain. The park showed off the shiny new Tornado Land featuring the brand new Tornado King, a ProSlide feature ride, plus a miniature version of the same slide (amongst others) for kids.


For those smart attendees who brought their suits, the ride was a hit! For the rest of us who read “rain” in the forecast when packing, there was amazing Spanish wine, so we all had fun!

ProSlide Tornado Land, Water World Lloret Tornado Land, Water World Lloret

I took copious notes to share my top takeaways from the day with those who couldn’t make it.

So, what did the operators and experts at the event have to say? Design for the future and listen to your guests! It seems obvious, but clearly the message still needs to be shared; to stay relevant, you must continue to evolve. So how can you do that?

Here are a few key nuggets that stood out to me

Guest experience & service

Guest service is the #1 priority; your staff’s job is to be friendly. What a great job!

Have a 5–10-year plan but stay flexible so you can pivot as needed. Remember to listen to the feedback you get!

Leverage technology where it will enhance convenience for guests and staff (cashless systems, notifications, RFID to connect family members).

Shareable action photos are a growing revenue opportunity. Bonus money if you can remove a big belly and make older guests look youthful! Ha.

Technology & innovation

Cashless systems are essential in water parks.

Use technology to enhance or update older rides, for example, light & music, rather than replace them.

People in an illuminated pool with vibrant, colorful digital art background. Aquascope

Operators have had limited success with VR in wet areas, but great success when used for non-riders. For example, when meeting the cultural needs of water park guests in countries where not all guests participate in the wet activities.

See also: Water park design for 2025: a sneak peek

Designing for families & kids

Create kid-friendly rides that mimic the adult ride experience so kids don’t feel left out.

In hot climates, a minimum of 80% shading in kids’ areas is ideal.

Adapt ride safety for the kids’ zone to make following the rules a fun part of the experience. A great idea I heard was 10-minute safety breaks where the kids zone closes so kids can use the WC or reapply sunscreen!

Account for cultural differences in guardianship and train staff on how to handle family units with varying degrees of hands-on care for kids.

Geography and family unit sizes dictate how much of your park should be focused on kids. In general, in the Middle East, this might be up to 40% of your park!

Lifejackets and swim diapers; get them and give them out as needed!

Safety & operations

Safety should enhance the guests’ experience, not simply restrict it.

Involve operators early in design to align safety with the park’s aesthetics.

Five lifeguards in red uniforms stand in a pool, holding life rings. Lifeguards at Park Vega

Lifeguard training culture is key. Training should be fun, interactive, and embedded in everyday park operations. I believe someone said, “Lifeguards are Legends…” They are right!

Explain the ‘why’ behind rules to both guests and staff to encourage buy-in and reduce the feeling of being “restricted”

Sustainability

Sustainability is expected by project funders, some guests and employees.

While it doesn’t always sell tickets, not being sustainable can hurt your business.

Sustainability improves labor attraction and retention.

Examples: increased use of solar power, better recycled water targets.

The O2 Surftown MUC operates on 90% solar power - WOW!

Trends & development

Current market instability means projects are trending towards more refurbishments versus new builds.

Vertical building (water parks growing up, not out) and mixed-use (retail + hotel + water) concepts are growing. While every operator dreams of growth, land is expensive. So, look up and use what you have.

Adventure and action elements can help differentiate parks.

Inclusiveness (e.g., autism certification) is now an expectation.

Project fusion is the way to go for future developments, combining dry attractions, hotels, retail, spas, wellness, residential, sports, and fitness with your waterpark/lagoon and/or surf destination.

While the focus of the day was on planning and operations for water parks in general, we were introduced to two notable examples: one is a new water park planned for Kyiv in Ukraine, called Buhta Park. This will be a multi-phase mixed-use development with everything from spas to playgrounds.

The second was the three-part green oasis water park called O’Gliss Park in France. This fantastic-looking venue has recently expanded to include new food & beverage/event facilities and consists of three areas: O’Fun Park, a forest-based adventure park with a handful of crazy wet rides; O’Gliss Park, the water park; and O’Tel Park, the western-themed accommodation venue.

This park has a target of achieving 83.7% recycled water in 5 years. And has grown by 100,000 visitors a year since 2021! What an incredible accomplishment.

So there you go, if you missed this event, you are now caught up!

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