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Huge Water Park Planned for Arizona Desert
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Huge Water Park Planned for Arizona Desert
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Last modified
7/19/2010 1:23:25 PM
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6/30/2010 2:52:28 PM
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Water Supply Protection
Description
Drought Issues
State
AZ
Date
11/26/2007
Author
Chris Kahn
Title
Huge Water Park Planned for Arizona Desert
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
News Article/Press Release
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I The Associated Press: Huge Water Park Planned for Ariz. Desert <br />http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hVG9_lgwzxWC9dXoXpjeon... <br />Huge Water Park Planned for Ariz. Desert <br />By CHRIS KAHN – 6 days ago <br />MESA, Ariz. (AP) — By tapping rivers and sucking water from deep underground, developers <br />have covered Arizona with carpets of Bermuda grass and dotted the parched landscape with <br />swimming pools, golf courses and lakeshore homes. <br />Now another ambitious project is in the works: A massive new water park that would offer <br />surf -sized waves, snorkeling, scuba diving and kayaking — all in a bone -dry region that gets <br />just 8 inches of rain a year. <br />"It's about delivering a sport that's not typically available in an urban environment," said Richard <br />Mladick, a Mesa real- estate developer who persuaded business leaders in suburban Mesa to <br />support the proposal called the Waveyard. <br />Artists' drawings of the park show surfers gliding through waves that crash onto a sandy beach <br />and kayakers navigating the whitecaps of a wide, roiling river. Families watch the action from <br />beneath picnic umbrellas. If constructed, the park would use as much as 100 million gallons of <br />groundwater a year. <br />Mladick, 39, said he wanted to create the kind of lush environment he remembers from growing <br />up in Virginia Beach, Va., and surfing in Morocco, Indonesia, Hawaii and Brazil. <br />"I couldn't imagine raising my kids in an environment where they wouldn't have the opportunity <br />to grow up being passionate about the same sports that I grew up being passionate about," he <br />said. <br />The Waveyard, to be built 15 miles east of Phoenix, would dwarf the typical water -slide parks <br />familiar to many Arizona families. <br />It will include an artificial whitewater river with multiple channels where kayakers can test <br />themselves on Class 2 to Class 4 rapids. Visitors could enjoy an artificial beach and a simulated <br />ocean capable of producing different size waves, from 12 -foot barreling waves to tamer chop <br />for boogie boarders. <br />The 125 -acre park will feature a scuba lagoon, a snorkeling pond with reefs and a rock - climbing <br />center. <br />The Waveyard is envisioned as the summer equivalent of a ski resort — only with more <br />choices, Mladick said. "We really struggle with the theme -park comparison. This is based on <br />skilled sports." <br />The park will also have restaurants, a shopping district, a spa, and a hotel and conference <br />center. <br />Jerry Hug, a businessman who co- founded the project, said he expects it will eventually <br />generate more than $1 billion in revenue and create 7,500 jobs. That is especially attractive in <br />Mesa, a city of about 460,000 people that has struggled to keep up with the booming <br />development of its neighbors. <br />"We don't have a property tax in our city," said Eric Jackson, chairman of the Mesa Chamber of <br />Commerce. "It requires us to be very heavily dependent on revenues from sales taxes." <br />Mesa voters overwhelmingly approved their proposal on Nov. 6, granting the Waveyard an <br />estimated $35 million in tax incentives with more than 65 percent of the vote. <br />No citizens groups overtly opposed the project, but its water usage may raise questions in the <br />future as the growing Phoenix areas struggles to replenish its vast aquifer. Arizona has been in <br />a drought for a decade, and rivers that feed Phoenix and surrounding communities experienced <br />near - record low measurements this year. <br />"Water is a scarce and valued commodity," said Jim Holway, associate director of the Global <br />Institute of Sustainability at Arizona State University. <br />Holway said the Phoenix area currently enjoys huge supplies of underground water. But it's <br />tough to determine exactly how long communities can sustain their rate of water consumption, <br />given that global warming may make the desert even drier. <br />1 of 2 11/26/2007 10:22 AM <br />
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