Aug 19, 2020
Aug 15, 2020
Riverside Waterslide in Medicine Hat, Alberta
Of the hundreds of photo essays I've shot over the years, it would seem few local spots I've featured have inspired as many overlapping stories, rites of passage, and rose-tinted nostalgia trips as the former Riverside Waterslide in Medicine Hat, Alberta.
As a kid of the 90's I'm as nostalgic about Riverside Waterslide as any other Hatter who experienced it seems to be. Like so many places that had a short lived heyday, it's one that only became more revered when people no longer had the option to go.
If you were a kid or teenager in Medicine Hat between the late 1970's to the early 2000's you probably have a story about Riverside Waterslide. Remember getting scratched up on the slides? The all-day sunburns? The floating tap? The end of school year trips? Lining up to get in? Being yelled at to slow down as you rushed with your friends to the top of the stairs? For decades this was a staple of any summer in Medicine Hat.
On top of that - Riverside Waterslide wasn't just a water park, they also had go karts and the best mini golf course in town. As a destination for tourists and locals, the amusement park was one of the most popular summer attractions in the area. So naturally, you're wondering what happened? Why did Riverside Waterslide close and why wasn't it ever saved from demolition?
By 2007 Riverside Waterslide had closed.
Not unlike a lot of outdoor waterslides across Canada that were built at a similar time, by the 2000's the park was showing its age. Maintenance costs were high, the summer season was too short, the land had become more expensive, and even in a good year you could only expect the average family to visit once or twice - and that was if you didn't lose a few prime weeks to rain.
Combine this with the fact that Medicine Hat already had two indoor waterslide attractions that operated year round at the Medicine Hat Lodge and Travelodge, and that in 2002 a brand new indoor wave pool and water park had just been completed at the Medicine Hat Leisure Centre.
There were a lot of reasons Riverside Waterslide didn't survive - and when the water park went up for sale there weren't any offers from anyone willing to take up the challenge.
A few years after Riverside Waterslide closed, the waterslides were dismantled and sold, the buildings were demolished, and the area where the park used to be just off of the Trans Canada Highway was fenced off. Today you'd never know it had been there.
But, for those of us who grew up here and who spent our formative years in the Hat in the few decades that Riverside Waterslide was "a thing" - we'll always have our "remember when" stories about this place. It was a gem - a rough, fibreglass splintered, scorching concrete, chlorine scented gem. And you can bet I'd rush the stairs to go one more time.
Click here to see images of the abandoned Riverside Waterslide.
Click here to see images of the abandoned Riverside Waterslide.
When I found this sticker all I could think of was the water park's iconic sign. |
The view from the top of the hill looking down to where the pool would've been. |
A fibreglass scrap left behind. |
The same view today as the picture below. |
Catalogue:
Abandoned Places
,
Alberta
,
Alberta Travel Photographer
,
Around the Hat Series
,
Images
,
Medicine Hat
,
Medicine Hat Photographer
,
Photography
,
Roadside Attractions
,
Theme Parks
Location:
Medicine Hat, AB, Canada
Aug 9, 2020
A Little House in the Hills
There's something special about finding a unique home away from home that helps you feel connected to the city you're visiting. This was the case after staying in a little house in the hills above Los Angeles, California on a return trip earlier this year.
With the house surrounded by lush vegetation and built into the hillside, there were long staircases in the front and back that connected it to the streets. At night you could see the distant lights across the hills and it felt especially secluded despite only being a half hour drive from the heart of downtown LA. It was exactly the kind of place you wanted to escape to and hangout after a long day of travel shoots, navigating, and spur of the moment detours.
With the house surrounded by lush vegetation and built into the hillside, there were long staircases in the front and back that connected it to the streets. At night you could see the distant lights across the hills and it felt especially secluded despite only being a half hour drive from the heart of downtown LA. It was exactly the kind of place you wanted to escape to and hangout after a long day of travel shoots, navigating, and spur of the moment detours.
Catalogue:
California
,
Historic Houses
,
Images
,
Los Angeles
,
Photography
,
Roadside California Series
Location:
Los Angeles, CA, USA
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