
Three-story indoor adventure park packed with explorable structures – including a real airplane, giant treehouses, and climbable utility poles. A multi-story ropes course and indoor/outdoor ziplines weave between the various levels.
A real, airworthy airplane hangs suspended inside Fritz's Adventure, and it’s just one of the massive structures you can explore across the 80,000-square-foot facility. The entire building is designed to feel like an outdoor adventure brought indoors. Spanning three stories, the space is a dense, energetic network of climbable objects – you’ll find giant treehouses connected by suspended bridges, a life-size water tower, and urban brick buildings to scale. A multi-story ropes course weaves through it all, creating a web of paths to navigate high above the ground floor, while underground tunnels and shipping containers offer routes to explore below. The activities are all physical challenges. The TreeTops course is the world’s first indoor/outdoor zipline, featuring over 40 obstacles and a crow's nest with expansive views before sending you back inside the building. Elsewhere, you can tackle towering rock walls, a 48-foot “City Wall,” or try to run up one of three different warped walls. It’s not all climbing, though – there are also five different slides and a laser maze built into the complex layout. Logistically, the place is set up for a full day. Admission is a wristband that grants re-entry, so it’s common to leave and come back. You can choose between different ticket tiers – an “All Access” pass for the harness-based attractions or a “Limited Access” pass for just the unharnessed activities. While teenagers and adults tackle the bigger climbs, younger kids have their own dedicated spaces, including the “Sky Tykes” ropes course for anyone under 48 inches. For a break from the action, a café on the upper mezzanine has seating with an open view of the entire park.