Zoomarine is a zoological park, oceanarium, amusement park and water park, located in Lazio, southwest of Rome, in Torvaianica, Pomezia. Inaugurated in September 2005, it is owned by Dolphin Discovery from August 2015.[1] It includes one of three Italian dolphinariums, with a dedicated area "Island of dolphins".[2]

Zoomarine
The view of the park from the Dolphin Discovery Stadium.
LocationTorvaianica, Rome, Italy Map Map
Coordinates41°38′01″N 12°27′24″E / 41.63361°N 12.45667°E / 41.63361; 12.45667
OpenedSeptember 2005
OwnerDolphin Discovery
ThemeAmusement park, water park, dolphinarium, zoo
Operating seasonSpring-Summer-Autumun
Attendance400,000
Area40,000 m2 (9.9 acres)
WebsiteOfficial website

Zoomarine is mainly a zoological park, it has several zoological areas divided by category, where you can admire educational demonstrations of dolphins, pinnipeds and sea lions, tropical and aquatic birds and penguins, but also includes water park and theme park attractions, with a total area of 40,000 m2. It counts 22 attractions.

Attractions edit

 
The dolphin show

Current Attractions edit

The park has 22 operating attractions, listed in chronological order of opening to the public. In brackets, the year of opening.

  • Blue River (2005), Log Flume.
  • Carousel (2005), Flat Ride.
  • Harakiri (2005), Slide.
  • Eureka (2005), Flat Ride.
  • Mini Octopus (2005), Flat Ride.
  • Octopus (2005), Flat Ride.
  • Little farm train (2005), little train.
  • Cinema 4D (2009), Cinema 4D.
  • Playground Cinema 4D (2009), Playground.
  • Vertigo (2010), Roller Coaster.
  • Age of the Dinosaurs (2011), Dark Ride.
  • Shark (2011), Junior Coaster.
  • Pirate Lagoon (2012), Splash Battle.
  • Hawaii (2016), Aquatic Playground. Until 2017 it was identified with the name of Acqua Splash.
  • Flow Rider (2016), Flow Rider. Until 2017 it was identified with the name of Surf.
  • Formula Segway (2017), Path inside the park.
  • Flight of the Hawk (2017), Zipline.
  • Pirate Cove (2017), Children's pool.
  • Cursed Galleon (2018), Horror House.
  • Land of Dragons (2018), Dark Ride.
  • Free Fall (2019), Inflatable.
  • Camelot (2022), Playground

Current attractions gallery edit

Attractions removed edit

The following attractions have been dismantled or decommissioned to make way for new attractions (in brackets the period in which they were in operation):

  • Playground (2006-2016)
  • Drop Zone (2009-2013), free fall tower
  • Playground Amazonia (2016-2017), playground

Gallery Removed Attractions edit

History edit

Born with the concept of a marine leisure park, the marine zoo has also become an amusement park and a water park. Zoomarine takes up the concept of the parks of the American group SeaWorld, just like the Zoomarine Algarve previously opened in Portugal, already owned by Mundo Aquatico SA. It attaches particular importance to the protection of nature and to the messages to convey to the public. It has a veterinary clinic and rehabilitation center for stranded animals.

In addition to its 5000 car park, there is a free shuttle service from Rome. Five hundred meters separate the park from the Tyrrhenian Sea. The construction of the park required 2 million euros which come from private resources with the support of large national banks.

In 2011, the park announced that its attendance had tripled in less than three years. It has grown from 220,000 visitors to more than 700,000 visitors per year, becoming the third Italian amusement park, an increase of 320%. Operating revenue increased from 5 to 20 million euros. That same year, director Stephen Cigarini was named director at Magicland (amusement park in Valmontone). Latella Aurelio resumes his post.

The company that owned Zoomarine Roma for a long time, Mundo Aquático, SA, was founded by Argentinian Pedro Lavia. This company is behind many other projects including the Mediterraneo Marine Park (Malta) and the Zoomarine (Portugal).

In 2015, the park was bought for 25 million euros by the Mexican company Dolphin Discovery.

References edit

  1. ^ "I messicani comprano lo Zoomarine". roma.repubblica.it (in Italian). Retrieved 3 November 2015.
  2. ^ "Aquariums, sea and kids: where to see dolphins in Italy". sissiworld.net. Retrieved 28 May 2018.

External links edit