Parents will soon be able to take the kids to a playground without the need to slather on sunscreen or mosquito repellent.
Indoor playground Wild Katz is expected to open by November at 4629 E. Speedway in the Mission Plaza at North Swan Road.
Designed for children ages 6 months to early teens, Wild Katz will have climbing walls, obstacle courses, toddler slides and a ball blaster arena with spiral slides and tunnels.
All venues will have a seating area for parents to keep an eye on the kiddos.
There will be a centrally located, old-fashioned soda fountain with ice cream, television sets, massage chairs and couches.
“The parent is our true client,” said owner Jenni Gardner.
Six party rooms, themed as a different cat — tiger, jaguar, leopard, cheetah, bobcat and lynx — will be available for 90-minute rentals that include use of the playground.
Prices are being calculated and will be posted on wldktz.com as the opening nears.
It was during a visit to an indoor playground last year that the mother of four got the idea of replicating the concept.
“I sat there and thought, ‘How does Tucson not have one of these?’” Gardner said. “I couldn’t stop thinking about it.”
Looking for space in central Tucson, her broker showed her the 15,562-square-foot space that was once occupied by Hibachi Super Buffet.
“It looked like they had left mid-shift,” Gardner laughed. “There were plates, napkins and soy sauce everywhere.”
The space is now cleaned up and ready for equipment to be installed. Kevin Volk and Jeramy Price, of Volk Co., handled the lease.
More and more, shopping center and mall landlords are looking for tenants that offer services or experiences that cannot be found online with a click.
“The old model for shopping centers was based on true retail, the sales of physical goods,” Volk said. “Going forward, the most successful ‘retail’ projects will feature tenants that are compelling enough to get consumers to leave the comfort of their homes, and the best will have a combination of consumables (groceries, restaurants), services (fitness, beauty) or for experience — in this case — an adventure playground.”
He said the neighboring Sprouts store generates a high number of customers and that “Wild Katz will be an excellent destination that can draw city-wide.”
More: 8 signs you grew up in Tucson in the 80's-90's
8 signs you grew up in Tucson in the 80s and 90s
If you were hot you went to Justin's or Breakers
UpdatedJustin's WaterWorld, at 3551 S. San Joaquin Road, had slides (the Cannonball, Blue Twisters!) and pools. It closed in 2007.
Breakers Water Park, at 855 W. Tangerine Road in Marana, had the giant wave pool.
The Tucson Mall was the place to be
UpdatedThe Tucson Mall had it all: The Lisa Frank store, the tiny-door entrance to the Imaginarium, the food court with the weird flags hanging from the ceiling where you were serenaded by a live pianist.
RIP Lisa Frank store. Your trapper keepers were everything.
El Con and Foothills malls were basically empty husks with movie theaters and giant parking lots. Lame.
Summer nights were for Toros games
UpdatedThe Tucson Toros won the PCL championship in 1991 and 1993 and fans filled Hi Corbett to cheer them on.
Former UA basketball star Kenny Lofton played for the Toros, and fan-favorite Joe Mikulik helped them win both championships.
The Toros drew in excess of 300,000 for six consecutive seasons.
1991: 317,347.
1992: 300,134.
1993: 307,791.
1994: 309,623.
1995: 301,963.
1996: 307,082.
The Toros left Tucson in 1998. Minor-league baseball left in 2013.
Here's where you went on field trips
Updated1. Golf N' Stuff (can't get enough).
2. Pre-fire Old Tucson
3. Museums at the UA
4. The UA
5. Justin's WaterWorld
6. Reid Park Zoo
7. The Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum
Here's where you had your birthday party
Updated1. DiscoveryZone
2. Peter Piper Pizza
3. The park
4. The pool
5. Gymnastics World
Skate Country
UpdatedSchool nights, Top 40 Night Friday and old-school roller skates were the attractions at Skate Country North and Skate Country East.
You just had to hope you didn't fall over in front of that kid you had a crush on and they didn't run out of cherry sno cones.
The Arizona Wildcats were national champions
UpdatedYou wished Lute Olson was your grandfather, wore a Wildcats basketball jersey to school every day and your teachers turned on March Madness games in class.
The Arizona Wildcats won the championship in 1997 and your dreams came true. Your parents let you skip school and go down to Arizona Stadium to greet the team when they came home.
Pete the Beak
UpdatedPete the Beak accosted you at the mall or at a school assembly and told you to "Beat the Peak," save water.
The mascot for the Water Department's Beat the Peak water-use program was encouraged Tucsonans to avoid using water during certain peak hours. The campaign also resulted in lower water use.