Alaska Frontier Park

 is a indoor amusement & water park in, owned by Carwardine Parks. It opened in 1995 and is located adjacent to. It is housed inside three buildings - the first of which is a converted airship hangar, which formerly belonged to El Kadsreian company Global Airships until 1989. It contains several play areas and indoor roller coasters.

The park served as an inspiration for the I-X Indoor Amusement Park (an annual event at the in ) and.

From 1995 to 1998 the park was known as "Marvel Frontier Park" and had the Marvel Comics license until Carwardine lost the Marvel license to Universal Studios in 1998. Now the park no longer has any particular theme.

A second indoor waterpark was added in 2005, Alaska Springs Indoor Waterpark.

Roller coasters

 * Boomerang (1995; A Vekoma Boomerang coaster, formerly known as "The Mighty Thor" [1995-1998])
 * Frontier Flyer (1995; A B&M inverted coaster, formerly known as "Spider-Man: Web Coaster" [1995-1998], original trains replaced with hand-me-down B&M Invert trains from Dragon Challenge in 2018)

Flat rides

 * Starship Expedition (1995; A Zamperla Telecombat ride, formerly known as "X-Jets" [1995-1998])
 * Top Spinner (1995; A Huss Top Spin ride, formerly known as "Hulk Smash" [1995-1998])

Kiddie rides

 * Biplanes (1999; A Huss-TechEruo Red Baron ride)
 * Crazy Bus (1999; A Zamperla Crazy Bus ride)

Restaurants

 * Cinnabon
 * KFC/Taco Bell (located inside an old Boeing 727 that Global Airships spared due to the datedness of the model)
 * Subway
 * Starbucks

Trivia

 * The Stan Lee plaque on the Frontier Flyer/Spider Man Web Coaster is still there, albeit painted over all orange instead of black and gold.