scorecard
  1. Home
  2. Home
  3. Brazil is building a £15.5 million sex-themed amusement park called ErotikaLand

Brazil is building a £15.5 million sex-themed amusement park called ErotikaLand

Chloe Pantazi,Chloe Pantazi   

Brazil is building a £15.5 million sex-themed amusement park called ErotikaLand
Home2 min read

ErotikaLand

Screenshot via softlove.com

Erotic sculptures will be dotted around Brazil's sex-themed amusement park in Piracicaba, a city about two hours' outside of São Paulo.

A sex-themed amusement park planned by entrepreneurs in Brazil is expected to open in 2018, with attractions including an erotic museum, nudist pool, and even a risque version of a ghost train.

ErotikaLand, which describes itself as an "erotic Disneyland" on its website, will open near Piracicaba, a city about two hours' outside of São Paulo. It will cost R $80 million (£15.5 million, or $22.5 million) to build, The New York Times reports.

Like other amusement parks, ErotikaLand will have access to a water slide, a maze, and a Ferris wheel, albeit one with hidden booths designed with a special material that will offer the people inside views of the outside as well as total privacy.

It also promises visitors - who must be over 18 and pay $100 (£69) for admission - access to erotic games, a sex shop, and a 7-D cinema that gives viewers an immersive film experience complete with varying temperatures and vibrations.

The park serves an educational purpose as well, with staff encouraging parkgoers to practice safe sex and use condoms, and an erotic museum dedicated to the history of sexuality, The New York Times reports.

Here's what ErotikaLand could look like:

ErotikaLand

Screenshot via softlove.com

The park will include a nudist pool and an erotic museum with a permanent collection of erotic art.

Though the project describes itself as "a liberal park where you can do everything," it adds that all activity must remain "within the law and with strict control of safety" on its website. There's no sex allowed on the premises, either.

"This won't be a place for nuns, but it's not like we're trying to recreate Sodom and Gomorrah," Mauro Morata, who is leading the project with his business partner Paulo Meireilles, told The New York Times. "If attendees want to take things to another level, they can go to a nearby motel - which we will operate."

While officials in the nearby cities of Piracicaba and São Pedro have attempted to stop ErotikaLand, Mauro told the newspaper that he is still looking for "an acceptable site" for the park.

NOW WATCH: Here's what it's like inside Disneyland's mysterious $40,000-per-person secret club

READ MORE ARTICLES ON


Advertisement

Advertisement