Livu Akvaparks
Līvu Akvaparks | |
---|---|
Location | Jūrmala, Latvia |
Owner | SIA "Korporatīvā Sabiedrība" (majority shareholder) |
Opened | December 30, 2003 |
Operating season | All year round |
Area | 18,000 square metres (190,000 sq ft) |
Website | www |
Līvu Akvaparks (English: Līvu Aquapark) is the largest indoor multifunctional water park in the Baltic States and one of the biggest in Eastern Europe.[1] The water park is one of Latvia's main tourist attractions. It is located in Jūrmala by the river Lielupe[2] and it has more than 40 attractions, including about 20 water slides, more than 10 pools, including a wave pool, a children's area, an artificial stream, spa for adults with a cocktail bar, whirlpool, and saunas.[3]
History
[edit]Līvu Akvapark was opened on 30 December 2003, after two years of construction at a cost of €16 million.[4] In early 2005 construction began on an outdoor water park and in the summer of the same year it was opened to the public. With the outdoor area, Līvu Akvapark's total space was expanded by 7,000 square metres (1.7 acres) bringing it to a total of 18,000 square metres (4.4 acres) making it the largest indoor water park in Northern Europe. In spring of 2007, the construction of a slide tower in the outdoor beach was started. Later, in 2008, an outdoor water fountain was added to celebrate the park's fifth anniversary. In 2012, it saw a complete reconstruction of the spa complex which added a salt chamber, four jacuzzis, a Turkish sauna, oxygen bath and more.[5] In 2014, the outdoor pool was reconstructed and other attractions added. The outdoor pool has a capacity of 700 cubic metres (180,000 US gal), which is a quarter of the whole supply of water in the aqua park.[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "Līvu akvaparks | What to do | Jurmala". www.inyourpocket.com. Retrieved 2019-05-07.
- ^ "Livu Aquapark | Latvia Travel". www.latvia.travel. Retrieved 2019-05-07.
- ^ "Līvu Akvaparks - Attractions". www.akvaparks.lv. Retrieved 2019-05-07.
- ^ Dace Plato (December 2003). "Karību noskaņa". www.diena.lv. Retrieved 2019-05-07.
- ^ "Līvu Akvaparks - History". www.akvaparks.lv. Retrieved 2019-05-07.
- ^ Lelde Petrāne (June 2014). "Līvu Akvaparks investē 500 tūkstošus baseinu kompleksā". Dienas Bizness. Retrieved 2019-05-07.