•
Wet 'n Wild Emerald Pointe – operated by
Herschend Family Entertainment in
Greensboro, North Carolina • Wet 'n Wild
Cancún – a water park in
Mexico. At opening in June 1997, the park spanned The $42 million park opened in October 1998, and spanned closed December 31, 2016. It has been replaced by the new
Volcano Bay waterpark that opened in 2017. •
Arlington, Texas – rebranded as
Six Flags Hurricane Harbor Arlington when purchased by
Six Flags in 1997. Located across
Interstate 30 from
Six Flags Over Texas. •
Garland, Texas – formerly a
Herschend Family Entertainment "White Water" park. The site is now occupied by a
CarMax dealership. •
Wet 'n Wild Las Vegas, operated from 1985 to 2004 – demolished for planned developments, including NBA-ready arena, which never materialized and now vacant land; not to be confused with the present-day
Wet'n'Wild Las Vegas. •
Salvador, Bahia – opened in 1996 as the first international park. It cost $28 million and spanned , however the park has gone bankrupt. • Rio de Janeiro – opened in October 1999. Attracted over 300 thousand visitors in its first year but ended up closing in 2004 due to small financial gains.
Cancelled locations • Brasília – $32 million, originally targeted to open in late 1998, but during construction, a system of residential water pipes was found under the proposed park's terrain, which led to the cancellation of the project. ==See also==