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Waltzing Waters

Attraction Type: Dancing Fountain/Lightshow

Location: Niagara Falls, Ontario

Years Operational: 1962-2000

Waltzing Waters was a dancing fountain that was synchronized to music, and even lights at night.  It opened in 1963 when Arthur White purchased the neighboring Burning Springs building and overhauled it as the Burning Springs Wax Museum.  In addition to the museum, he built Waltzing Waters between it and the neighboring Seagram Tower.  Guests would pay admission to enter the viewing area for the large outdoor fountain, which required an operator at a switchboard to control.

The Seagram complex in 1962 before the wax museum moved into the old Burning Spring building.  The blue Waltzing Waters pool can be seen in the middle.

The fountain was lightyears ahead of it's time, and at a time when computers were in their infancy.  It was built by Robert Dunham, creative genius who would go on to make major advancements in the world of special effects, animatronics, and haunted attractions with his Waxattract company.  Dunham was a painter who had recently opened Fantasy Land, his first amusement attraction, at the nearby Crystal Beach Amusement Park.  Waltzing Waters however would be his first attraction in Niagara Falls proper, and first commission for an amusement attraction owned by another party.

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The fountain at the bottom-middle in this 1965 image.  The cut out area on the right side of the fountain is the control booth, which the pool surrounded on three sides.

It's unknown how exactly the show itself changed year-to-year, but the fountain would expand in 1971.  With the switchboard operating system, the show could in theory be different every time, or customizable to whatever song was currently being played.  A similar switchboard setup could later be found in the Lightshow rooms of Dunham's international chain of Castle Dracula attractions.  The Waltzing Waters switchboard operator in 1972 was Werner Maetzke, as evidenced by a newspaper article from July of that year.  The same article states that the $150,000 switchboard he's pictured sitting at was brought in from West Germany the year prior, hinting that the attraction's technology was updated in 1971 as well.

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Werner Maetzke, the show's maestro, at the updated controls in 1971.

The much larger fountain after it's expansion in 1971, pictured here in the 1980's.

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The show was free for the 1972 and 1973 seasons, being changed to $1 admission for adults (free for children) in 1974. A combination ticket was also offered that included White's Burning Springs Wax Museum and National Marine Aquarium of Canada, which set guests back $3.95. it's unknown at what point it became free again, but late-70s newspaper advertisements promote it being free by at least 1978 and offering three shows nightly. It's unknown if it ever reverted to an admission ticket afterwards.

Above and below: series of postcards from the early 70s when the neighboring tower was named the "Royal Inn Tower", and the complex the "Royal Centre."  These postcards show just how vibrant and impressive the fountain was, yet likely still don't do it justice.

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The fountain was on land leased to White from the Seagram (later Royal Heritage) Tower, which White eventually became owner of (and therefore Waltzing Waters entirety) in 1970, renaming it the Royal Inn Tower (later Panasonic Tower.)  The Tower would be sold again along with the Burning Springs Wax Museum and National Marine Aquarium of Canada in 1976 to Japanese businessman Takeshi Shimizu, and from him to the Bolus family who owned the land the attractions were on in 1981.  White however would retain ownership of the fountain through all this until 1992, when it was auctioned off.  The old Burning Springs building next door, which had most recently housed the Dare Devil Gallery, was demolished the same year.  The fountain would be bought by an unknown buyer and continue to run in it's original spot until 1995, when it was moved across the street to make way for the Marriott Falls View.  It lasted in its new home until 2000.  It's unknown if anyone bought the equipment for the fountain or where it went, and the attraction ended up being demolished and disappeared from the Niagara attraction landscape for good.

The fountain and Panasonic Tower, 1970's.

© 2024 Canadian Amusement History   Created by Alex Crew

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