Captain SpacemakerThe tallest water slide in Europe is the 138-foot Captain Spacemaker at Aqualandia Park in Jesolo, Italy. Located 30 miles northwest of Venice, guests don't need a gondola to experience this fun water park.
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Located in Barra Do Pirai, Brazil, Kilimanjaro is the world's tallest waterslide opened in 2002.
Tsunami Surge is the tallest water coaster in the world at a height of 86 feet! Reach a top speed of 28 miles per hour over 950 feet of enclosed tunnels and open air slides featuring three gravity-defying blasts and five breathtaking drops, along with five hairpin turns.
Siam Park in Tenerife is Spain's biggest water park, an adventure wonderland filled with thrilling rides and slides, including the Tower of Power, which propels visitors through a tank of sharks and stingrays, and the world's longest lazy river.
The First WaterslideThe first water slide was seen in New Zealand as a display in their 1906 International Exhibition. Among the many available rides that were first debuted as entertainment there was the newly built water chute.
Siam Park is the biggest water park in Europe. Situated in Adeje, in the south of Tenerife, the park is home to an incredibly long network of impressive water slides.
PortAventura Caribe Aquatic ParkCaribe Aquatic Park, near Salou, is one of the main attractions of Port Aventura, Spain's most-visited theme park. Little ones can play Jack Sparrow in the pirates' playground, while older visitors can try the highest free-fall slide in Europe… if their stomachs can take it.
1 Chimelong Water Park, Guangzhou, ChinaChimelong Water Park in Guangzhou became the world's most popular water park a few years after it opened in 2007.
As for the world's tallest waterslide, it sits a continent away in Barra Do Pirai, Brazil, near Rio de Janeiro at the Aldeia das Aguas Park Resort. Named Kilimanjaro, after the world's largest free-standing mountain, the waterslide is 164 feet tall, according to the Water Slide Database.