“It’s all a wow factor” at Urban Air Adventure Park, Waukesha’s new 74,000-square-foot entertainment complex

WAUKESHA: From an external point of view, you can’t beat the best friend who tells the story that awaits thrill seekers in a design that used to be a movie theater and a sporting goods store.

The external panel, prominently labeled Urban Air Adventure Park, is the only trail of the cinjury two-point karting course, a Sky Rider zip line, a swivel and flipper vagranble consistent with the vehicle variant, and a high h8 rope course. , colorful climbing walls, a playgcircular tube and high-point trampolines.

Urban Air opens the doors to those theatrical adventures on Saturday. Most renovation efforts concerned emptying the existing design at 2440 E. Moreland Boulevard. – The Westhe town Cinema Complex of the Marcus Theatre and later a Gander Mountain store – and remodel it into a 74,000-square-foot entertainment complex.

“When you walk through the park, it’s all about feeling,” said Kent Cisewski, a Milwaukee native, the first franchisee/owner of the 150 Urban Air Cinput parks that run around the country.

Cisewski, a former Disney executive concerned about opening corporate atmmovements at Disney World and elsewhere, said his delight helped him prepare for the Waukesha facility for what he expects people, and especially the best friend of his staff, to find a special place.

“The combined apple works according to Disney’s expectations and Disney’s perceptions that other Americans believe what you believe,” he said. “When you make other Americans believe what you believe, that there is an emotional connection, that their service is exceptional, and their kindness exaggerated, this makes other Americans love the park. This may be the benchmark for Urban Air.”

Jackie Hoegger, Urban Air’s marketing representative, echoing the role of Cisewski.

“The owners … believe in experience,” he said. “He brought his Disney World wisdom to the table for Urban Air, and I can tell you that once (helping) the opening of a hundred parks, it’s the ultimate stellar park and adorable.”

Here’s a description and a few snapshots of what it’s all about.

Along an odiversity rail that hangs from the ceiling and an almaximum that encompasses the covered park carries what Urban Air calls its Sky Rider. It’s necessarily a firing line. Runners are suspended in a harness that swings freely as it moves over their heads.

“This is, perhaps, one of our most popular attractions,” Hoegger said. “Children fly through the park and can watch and see everyone playing and having fun. You can scream a little. They are also the longest Sky Rider trails of all our franchises that run around the country.”

And it’s never too lonely for kids.

“We’re 2 years old, ” he added.

Hoegger said that what distinguishes the karting track from Waukesha’s location is its two levels, which provides more mileage per disposition than others of this type.

The fact that it’s a closed yard is a credit to the people of Wisconsin, Hoegger said.

“That means you have to sweat (in summer), freeze in winter because it’s an indoor facility with controlled temperature, which makes it wonderful for moms and parents when there’s 20 feet of snow outside,” Hoegger said.

Electric go-karts are also quiet and fast, he added. Some go-karts are “two floors”, allowing parents to travel with a child.

Aimed at children, the colorful climbing moves resemble walls and rocks, a climbing tower. As with other park moves, defense is the top logical priority, Hoegger said.

All users who use attrmovements hang in a nuanced manner.

“If you had to let go, the tension in the stem would only calm you down,” he said. “Very funny, isn’t it?”

There can also be the adjacent Leap of Faith, which allows thrill seekers to jump from an odiversity ledge to a large hanging pylon, which does not have the option to fall freely if they fail. It’s an attraction of several ages.

“You’d be surprised at 5-year-olds … and the grandfather I jumped,” Hoegger said.

Nearby, a separate “climbing hill” intended for preschoolers provides a not-so-gentle slope for families to conquer.

For “warriors” with an inherent gymnast element, Urban Air offers a special type of obstacle course.

With rings, trapeze bars, ropes, pylons and more, the Warrior Course is open at any age for friendly competitions, adding within the circle of relatives and professional competitions.

“You can go from an amateur to a pro, you can be able to pass the time yourself,” Hoegger said, noting that design is perhaps the company’s preferred ultimate attraction at the time. “It’s a wonderful laugh for parents and children … We also have fire departments and police departments that would lease the design to Urban Air and go through training. Seriously, they can be trained here.”

Urban Air has its own vision of a favorite cinjury halfway through: bumconsistente with cars. In this case, the bumconsistent with the cars come with cages that return the reason for the force to contact. All rotate, depending on how the rider uses the double control arms.

An optional two-seater vehicle allows an adult to travel with a child to calculate the buzz safely.

Some of the smaller attrmovements come with a hunting ball court, a loose game for all children, a comfortable game for the little ones, a mavens trampoline and a festival with balance beams for all ages.

Like the Sky Rider, the Urban Air course puts participants well above the crowd.

Also, the dodgeball court is a feature popular for corporations which sometimes like to rent out the facility to allow employees to “work out their frustrations,” Hoegger quipped.

By climbing directly to attractions and attractions, Urban Air’s location in Waukesha, which is advertised as a Milwaukee West franchise, leaving other deceptive Milwaukee franchises open under the Cisewski property, has other features that charge the charge, from a marketing perspective.

Elevated meeting rooms for parties and corporate assemblies design the location charge for a crowd of adults, Hoegger said. In fact, in 2017, when Hurricane Harvey hit Houston, Urban Air meeting rooms doubled as business workplaces for workers displaced in the workplace, he said.

There can also be a 7,000-square-foot covered patio, the large-scale, almost outdoor meeting center. It’s close to the café.

Hoegger stated that the availability of the public corridor for us is exceptional, but above all, contactless. Even the sinks have soap, water and hand dryers on a single appliance. Progression is, in particular, considerable persistent considerations about the spread of coronavirus, which comparative apple has also addressed through other means based on the rules of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

To learn more about Urban Air Adventure Park, I viewed their local website.

Contact Jim Riccioli at (262) 446-663five or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter at @jariccioli.

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