Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Nagashima Spa Land
Japanese amusement park in Kuwana From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Nagashima Spa Land (ナガシマスパーランド, Nagashima Supā Rando) is an amusement park and vacation resort in Kuwana, Mie, Japan, about 30 km west of Nagoya. It opened in 1966, and features an amusement park with several roller coasters, thrill rides, kiddie rides, a water park (open only in the summer), a hot springs complex, an outdoor outlet mall, and 3 official hotels.[3]
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Japanese. (September 2011) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
In 2022, Nagashima Spa Land hosted 4.2 million visitors, making it the 21st-most visited amusement park in the world and the fourth-most visited in Japan behind Tokyo Disneyland, Tokyo DisneySea and Universal Studios Japan that year.[4]

Remove ads
Rides
Summarize
Perspective
Roller coasters
Nagashima Spa Land has 12 roller coasters.[1]

Ferris wheel
Nagashima Spa Land is the home of Aurora Wheel, a giant Ferris wheel. It is 90 metres (295 ft) tall[5] and 83 metres (272 ft) in diameter.[6]
Remove ads
Other attractions
Nabana-no-Sato

Nabana-no-Sato is a botanical garden known for its seasonal flower and light shows. It covers an area of roughly 230,000 square meters and is filled with over 12,000 species of flowers. During the spring, tulips and dahlias bloom throughout it. The illumination park, which features more than 8 million LEDs, is open from mid-October to early May.
Attractions within the garden include the Tunnel Of Light (the largest illuminated flower garden in Japan), the Begonia Garden, the Nagashima Beer Garden, the Santono-yu Spa, and the Island Fuji Observation Platform.[7][8][9][10]
Yuami-no-Shima
Yuami-no-Shima is a hot spring (onsen) theme park located at Nagashima Spa Land. It is the largest theme park of its kind in Japan.[7]

Remove ads
Incident
On 19 October 2003, one of Steel Dragon 2000's trains lost a wheel, which hit a guest in the water park, leaving the guest with a broken hip.[11] The ride was closed for three years until sturdier wheels were installed, and it reopened in 2006.[11]
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads
