We walked over. Did not expect they would be open. Condition was so-so... it was the first day they were open to 'public'. I did all the slides that were open (3 were not), and there were some friction issues here and there... don't know if they need waxing, more water flow, or just more use. The zip lines (one son and I did the circuit) were good, no issues. They were a bit under-staffed - so some slides on the same level had one employee having to man the slide entrances that were on opposite ends from each other, the lazy river (that was the most sketchy to me, as far as 'clean') had 2 employees only... and they made everyone wear life jackets - I'd guess that is because there were not any additional employees to monitor the river at various points. The most staffing went to the zip lines, as there were 2 employees at each station. The elevator was not in operation. The walkways from slide exit back to the temple area were kind of hard on bare feet. We only checked out the pool/snack area on the way out to grab a water, but that looked pretty clean... and that's where we saw the most people on our visit; we encountered maybe a dozen others here or there while we did the slides. Granted, since there was hardly anyone else there and we got there early, we got through all we wanted in just a couple hours. They also used to have cameras for rides that used rfid bracelet technology. That's not in operation - the few sensors that we saw, on the lazy river part, didn't look in good shape. All-in-all, it is kind of expensive for the state it was in... but then, the zip lines do add value. But I don't see it being able to attract enough people to pay for all the rehab and staffing it would need, and if it did attract bigger crowds, it would be less enjoyable. Sorry for the ramble, hope I touched on the main points.