The Axolotlian Extreme Weather Simulator is a large building capable of holding a 2 story building, and is 2 acres in area, it can simulate up to 10 in of rain per hour, using a grid of varying sized sprinklers on the ceiling. It can also simulate up to 60 mph wind using the fact it is also a giant wind tunnel. It is currently owned and operated by the National Axolotlian Weather and Geologic Service (NAWGS). It was inspired by NIED in Japan.
It is in Grest-Powderville, and was built by us, but it was too expensive for us to keep so we sold it to the government.
It currently has a complex schedule where it flips between tests and recreation.
2 weeks of science and research where companies bid to use it for a week, each weekend it gets bid, and then they have a week to do anything they want, then after the two weeks it opens up to tourism and people can pay to visit it and do their own little experiments in it, it will have varying weather conditions that cycle that people can do tests of their own in, such as test if their new shed will work or not, for example.