Showing posts with label Walt Disney World Resort. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Walt Disney World Resort. Show all posts

Saturday, October 2, 2021

WDW@50

"Walt Disney World is tribute to the philosophy and life of Walter Elias Disney...and to the talents, the dedication, and the loyalty of the entire Disney organization that made Walt Disney's dream come true.  May Walt Disney World bring Joy and Inspiration and New Knowledge to all who come to this happy place...a Magic Kingdom where the young at heart of all ages can laugh and play and learn - together."
Roy O. Disney, October 25, 1971


Yesterday, Walt Disney World celebrated its 50th anniversary.  On October 1, 1971, the Magic Kingdom opened its gates for the first time.  At that time, Walt Disney World was a lot smaller than we would think of today, consisting only of the Magic Kingdom theme park, the Ticket and Transportation Center, and the Contemporary and Polynesian resorts, all located on the monorail line circling Seven Seas Lagoon.  

With the success of Disneyland in Anaheim, California, Walt Disney began exploring several options for a second theme park location.  Primarily, Walt wanted to find space to combat the encroachment of motels and shops that had sprung up right next to Disneyland.  

"The Florida Project", as it was known, was intended to present a distinct vision with its own diverse set of attractions. While a theme park would be included as an attraction, it was only a small portion of Walt's vision.  His original plans also called for the inclusion of an "Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow" (EPCOT).  Instead of the theme park we know today, this EPCOT was a master planned community intended to serve as a testbed for new city-living innovations. 

Walt's death in 1966 during the planning phase of development left the company wrestling with the idea of whether to bring the Florida Project to fruition. However, Walt's older brother, Roy, came out of retirement to make sure Walt's biggest dream was realized.   And it was Roy who insisted the name of the entire complex be changed from Disney World to Walt Disney World, ensuring that people would remember that the project was Walt's dream.

Though the pandemic put a damper on a lot of the celebration plans, the company is still celebrating in true Disney fashion, with two nighttime spectaculars, EARidescent decorations and costumes, and lots of nostalgic food and souvenirs.  The pandemic also didn't stop massive crowds from arriving yesterday to celebrate the anniversary, with the Hub area filling to capacity in early evening for the new fireworks show.

The celebration will be continuing for the next 18 months in typical Disney fashion, and we will look forward to celebrating this December.  

Happy Birthday, Disney World!  Here's to 50 more magical years!

Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Disney News Update - New Deluxe Hotel for Walt Disney World

Thursday, October 18, 2018, Disney announced plans to build a new deluxe resort in Walt Disney World, to be completed in 2022.  This new hotel is to bring an additional 900 rooms to Walt Disney World, finalizing a 1,700 room increase over the next four years.  The new hotel is to be nature inspired and mixed use, meaning it will likely have a combination of hotel rooms and Disney Vacation Club suites.

New Disney Hotel Concept Art (c) Disney
The concept art reveals a Frank Lloyd Wright-esque design for the hotel, seemingly using a mixture of natural materials to complete the aesthetic.  The new hotel is to be situated between the Wilderness Lodge and Fort Wilderness, likely over the old River Country location.   Plans for this development seem to have been dubbed Project 89 internally. 

Possible location and layout from older plans.
I'm of mixed minds on the development.  I am glad to see the site developed and hope to see touches of River Country in the resorts pools.  I am not sold on the potential architecture design in this particular location.  While a Frank Lloyd Wright inspired hotel would be a great addition to the Walt Disney World hotel family, this location was earmarked for a hotel development that would continue a story of time and place.  Something that moved from Pioneer Hall at Fort Wilderness representing the deep woods to the rustic Pacific Northwest of the Wilderness Lodge.  This location should be something representing more of the traditional Old West that we think of.  The Buffalo Junction plans.  I could have also gone with a design aesthetic that would mirror a late 1960s/1970s Winnebago inspired travel motel.  Something that would match the great design for the new chuck wagon at Fort Wilderness and the 1971 opening of the Walt Disney World Resort.

Fort Wilderness Chuck Wagon
I'm also not sold on the potential names that have been rumored for this resort.  Disney's Discovery Lodge, Reflections: A Disney Lakeside Resort, and Disney's Colors of Nature Resort seem to have all been included as possibilities in surveys for the new resort.  Of these, Disney's Discovery Lodge is the least offensive, but there seems to be a pattern of moving away from resorts that establish a different time and place.  Traditional Disney resorts were transportive.  They moved you to a different location (like the Polynesian, Saratoga Springs, the Animal Kingdom Lodge) or place (the Grand Floridian).  This simply seems to be a specific design choice.  An architectural style.  While there is nothing wrong with that, it is a complete shift from what Disney has generally offered in the past and a concern for its blend with the existing Fort Wilderness campgrounds given the proximity.  Disney's Riviera and Coronado Springs towers are further examples of this trend.

And for the name, it seems clear that it should be Disney's River Country Resort.

I'll be keeping an eye on this development.  Hopefully as more concept art is revealed and more features of the resort are described, it will become clearer and a little bit more Disney.

Wednesday, July 11, 2018

If I Were Disney CEO Part 13 - Walt Disney World Future Expansion

“Here in Florida, we have something special we never enjoyed at Disneyland…the blessing of size. There’s enough land here to hold all the ideas and plans we can possibly imagine.”
Walt Disney

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As I've gone through the Walt Disney World portion of this series, my proposals have added:

  • 57 new or updated attractions across the property
  • 9 new hotels
  • 1 new shopping and dining district
  • Additional entertainment and nighttime spectaculars
  • Many other little touches.

For this post in the series, the goal was to look at future expansion of Walt Disney World.  And to me, with what has already been covered, that boils down to two additional offerings: a Broadway class theater and theme park number five.  While there is still a lot of undeveloped property, those seem to be the only things that have not been covered already.

I'll start with discussing the smaller and easier addition first, the Broadway class theater.  With Disney on Broadway and the touring productions, Disney Theatrical Productions has 19 productions that could be staged.  Orlando already has the Dr. Phillips Center for the Broadway Across America productions.  I can envision Disney wanting to keep theater patrons on property with a resident production or a tour stop.  Cirque du Soleil in some ways captures this audience, but I believe there is room for both.  I would, however, not build the Broadway class theater near Disney Springs.  Rather, I would find a place near Disney Hollywood Studios to tie into that entertainment park.  Perhaps as part of a Disney Metropolitan New York style hotel, dining, and shopping complex.  A mini-Times Square if you will, with one theater, dining, and shops.  I've updated a previous image with a couple of thoughts on possible locations.

Possible locations for the Disney Broadway Theater

The next expansion is probably one of the most talked about visions of the future.  Park number five.  To me, a fifth park is really not needed from a visitor perspective.  As Disney has found, given the shortness of American vacations, a fifth park would not lead to guests extending their stays, but cannibalizing their time at the other parks.  Accordingly, a fifth park should not even be considered until all of the previously proposed build out has occurred.  Then and only then, dreaming of a fifth park becomes fun.

I have very specific ideas about the overall theme of the park and how it relates to the rest of Walt Disney World.  In my opinion, Disney succeeds when it sticks to the four initial themes that Walt Disney himself outlaid for entertainment.  This goes for all realms that Disney is involved in, including theme parks, film, television, media, etc.  Adventure, Fantasy, Yesterday, and Tomorrow.  The four initial lands of Disneyland and the four themed offerings on the Disneyland television show.

In building out the theme parks of Walt Disney World, I envision then a Disneyland style park, flanked by specific explorations of each individual theme.  So the Magic Kingdom surrounded a park each for Adventure, Fantasy, Yesterday, and Tomorrow.  EPCOT covers Tomorrow and Animal Kingdom covers Adventure.  The question mark was always Disney Hollywood Studio and the side it came down on.  It at times represented both Yesterday and Fantasy.  It covered the history and exploration of Hollywood and film and it transported you to those Fantasy realms of film.  With the re-envisioning of Hollywood Studios, the park is clearly becoming the Fantasy park.  It's goal now is to transport you fully into the Fantasy worlds of film, from Andy's back yard, to Batuu in the Star Wars Universe, and to the Muppet theater.

That leaves Yesterday for park number five.

And the biggest question then is what Yesterday? It could seemingly cover world history, American history, or Florida history.  World history and culture is a bit covered by EPCOT, so I do not think it would be wise to overlap there.

Disney does have plans for an American history park, Disney's America.  Originally planned for Haymarket, Virginia, and even considered for an attempted Knott's Berry Farm acquisition, pieces of the Disney's America plans have been brought to life in Disney parks around the globe.  Soarin and the surrounding Victory Field area became Condor Flats at Disney California Adventure.  The Family Farm area became the Bountiful Valley Farm.  The Lewis and Clark River Expedition became the Grizzly River Rapids and the State Fair Coaster became California Screamin'.  This incorporation would make an exact implementation of Disney's America difficult.  Likewise, the sections already covered by Disney parks (and particularly those in Orlando) in other capacities like Main Street and its representation of turn of the century small town life, Liberty Square and the picture of colonial America, and Frontierland and its picture of the American west should not be duplicated.

I do think you could still build a Disney American Celebration park in Walt Disney World using the strongest of the remaining concepts in the original plans and bolstered with new designs.  From this, I would envision a park with the following sections:

  • Native America, 1600-1810: A recreation of a Native American village that would have reflected the tribes of Virginia and the surrounding area.  Guest would enjoy interactive experiences, exhibits, and arts and crafts.  I believe you could still have the whitewater raft ride traveling through this area as the Lewis and Clark Expedition.  With the right theming, it should be different enough from the Grizzly River Rapids and the Kali River Rapids to exist in the park.
  • Crossroads, 1800-1850: A pre-Civil War era village serving as the entry to Disney's American Celebration.  Guests would enter under an 1840s train trestle, featuring the antique steam trains circling the park.
  • Fort Shenandoah, 1850-1870: A Civil War fort for exploration would bring guests into a more turbulent time of American history; with an adjacent Freedom Bay, where water battles between the Monitor and the Merrimac would be staged as the thrilling nighttime spectacular.  I believe you could also have a theater here for the Gettysburg address version of Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln.
  • Enterprise City, 1870-1930: Our big city at the turn of the century, with the Industrial Revolution roller coaster through a 19th century landscape with heavy industry and blast furnaces and the We the People show in a replica of the Ellis Island building.
  • State Fair, 1930-1945: An area based on 1930s Brooklyn with a live show about baseball in a recreation of Ebbett's Field and a true state fair midway with carousel, Ferris wheel, and wooden roller coaster.
  • Anyburg, USA, 1950-1960: A 1950s Main Street, complete with soda fountain, a diner, a five-and-dime, a record shop, a drag race ride and a bandstand for a sock hop.  This area could get a little meta as it could include appropriate Disney-ana from the time.  Televisions playing Disneyland in the store windows.
I believe that provides an exciting framework to build from, creating something that would be unique within the Disney park portfolio, allowing for a true exploration of history, and for the quality theme park attractions that Disney is known for.  Disney has always had a connection to Americana, so the fit would be appropriate.

I also believe Disney could create a fun Florida history park, an idea I recently stumbled onto.  I think you could replicate much of Disney California Adventure in Florida, replacing each section for an appropriate Florida based version.  With that in mind, I would envision a Disney Florida Adventure park with the following:


  • Reedy Key Boulevard (Buena Vista Street) - Our Florida "Main Street" inspired by the colors of Key West and Duval Street.  The mix of Bahamian and Spanish influences with the pastel and vibrant colors, would make a great welcoming entry for the park.  I would culminate the street at a recreation of the original St. Augustine Lighthouse.  The goal was to find a historic Florida landmark that is no longer existing.  A tie to Florida's past that still looks inviting. The lighthouse tower itself could be an attraction to climb to the top for views of the park, with a signature restaurant in the main building.


  • Big Cypress National Park (Grizzly Peak National Park) - this section would be dedicated to the Everglades and the swamps of Florida.  The centerpiece would be a clone of Roaring Rapids from Shanghai, including the encounter with a long thought extinct super-gator.  The main difference would be the vegetation, replacing the mountain with the swamp and cypress trees.  This section would also include Kermit's Swamp Days and an indoor "airboat" tour ride.
  • Art Deco Row (Painted Ladies) - The small San Francisco section of painted ladies would be complemented by a Miami Ocean Drive building section. Likewise the Palace of Fine arts Rotunda and accompanying building for the Little Mermaid would be replaced by the Plymouth Hotel Building from Miami Beach.


  • Buena Beach Boardwalk (Paradise/Pixar Pier) - this section would be inspired by the classic pleasure piers on Florida's coasts, particularly the Daytona Boardwalk/Main Street Pier.  This section would have a classic-style roller coaster, carousel, Ferris wheel, as well as other flat and midway rides.  One important component would be a recreation of the Daytona Beach Bandshell for impromptu performances.



  • Orange Bird Grove (Pacific Wharf) - Here the industrial Pacific Wharf dining area will be replaced by an orange grove, shop, and diner.  Paying tribute to the many roadside attractions that popped up in Florida's history. A home for the Orange Bird, with Citrus Swirl stand, American diner restaurant, Florida Citrus Commission sponsored walk through, and tchotchke shop.  I would even have a Fountain of Youth "roadside attraction" here in this area.
  • Carsland (Carsland) - Carsland would be replicated with a land focused on Cars 3 and the Florida racing elements identified within. Same basic layout, with a street leading to a signature attraction at the end.  Minor attractions on one side of the street, shopping and dining on the other.  The signature attraction here would be a racing simulator in the Rust-eze Racing Center.  Think Cars meets the Flights of Passage ride in Pandora.  Complemented by a Miss Fritters Thunder Hollow Derby (bumper cars or a mini-figure 8 spinning coaster) and an Autopia like driving attraction which could cover the beach and woods driving scenes in Cars 3, the attractions should represent a great deal of fun.  Add in the Cotter Pin Bar & Grill and this could be a very fun addition.  Guests could be racing from Carsland coast to coast.

(c) Disney

  • Dumbo's Circus (a bug's land) - In place of the "kiddie" land a bug's land, I would add the other Disney animated feature that is set in Florida: Dumbo.  For Dumbo's circus, I would add much of the current Storybook Circus, as well as a Casey Jr. Circus train ride and the Dumbo Circus show proposed in the Magic Kingdom post.  Moving this area to this park could free up space in Fantasyland in the Magic Kingdom for another expansion area from the Disney Renaissance like Hercules or Mulan.
  • Port Exploration (Hollywoodland) - Hollywoodland is replaced by an area themed to Cape Canaveral.  This would provide an opportunity to have a both Space Center themed attractions and port and cruise themed attractions.  It would be fascinating to split the land with Space Center taking up the Hollywood Backlot area and the Port taking up the other half, complete with a docked S.S. Columbia, like in Tokyo Disney Sea.

I think that creates a very interesting park.  Familiar, but different.  And it has a greater flexibility for Disney's current push to utilize intellectual properties in the park.  I'm partial to the Disney American Celebration park, but would be pleased with a Disney Florida Adventure park.

And since I did it for all the others, the mascot of Disney American Celebration would be Sam the Eagle from America Sings.  The mascot for Disney Florida Adventure would be the Orange Bird.

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That closes out the Walt Disney World Resort.  Thank you for continuing to read.  As the series continues, Disneyland Paris.



Wednesday, June 27, 2018

If I Were Disney CEO Part 13 - The Walt Disney World Resort - Hotels

A hotel or campground right for everyone.

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The Walt Disney World resort has over twenty distinct hotel and resort properties within its boundaries, offering a wide variety of accommodations.  Motel style rooms.  Family suites.  Wilderness cabins.  Three bedroom treehouses.  And a variety of multi-room villas.

Currently, resorts are grouped by price point. Value, Moderate, Deluxe, and Villa.  The company is likely switching to a location based grouping, with price points reflecting the proximity.  Magic Kingdom resorts, EPCOT Resorts, Disney Hollywood Studios Resorts, Disney Animal Kingdom Resorts, and Disney Springs Resorts.

The company is also going through an impressive expansion in its hotel offerings.  The construction of the new tower and general expansion of the Coronado Springs Resort.   The construction of the Riviera Disney Vacation Club Resort adjacent to the Caribbean Beach Resort.  The immersive storytelling Star Wars Resort.  There's even the new non-Disney, but Disney property C2 hotel going in among the Swan and Dolphin.

That does not even begin to address the rumors of further hotel expansion.   The Project 89 work at Fort Wilderness, likely for a new resort complex there.  (Addressed in the previous entry to this series).    And the EPCOT entrance hotel.

Accordingly, there is a lot of anticipated growth in the hotel and resort segment of Walt Disney World.  Once these additions, are complete, I believe there are just a couple of additional remodelings and expansions that should be undertaken to fully flesh out the resort.

Primary Goals:
  • I want to make sure that a balance is maintained regarding the mix of types of amenities and price points.  Between hotel and DVC units.
  • There should be a return to unique and thematic architecture and interior design.  Recent additions to the resorts are getting very structurally similar, with just the details left as unique. Compare the Coronado tower and Riviera Resort renderings above and then compare that to the difference between the Contemporary and Polynesian.
  • I would want to further group the resorts by transportation type.  Beyond location specific, there should also be the Monorail resorts, the gondola resorts, the boat resorts, and the train resorts.  Unique and appropriate offerings for the particular location grouping.

Rather than discuss every resort and potential additions, I'm going to focus on the specific additions and changes that I would make.  Most resorts function well and just need periodic refreshing of the decor and interior design.  There's no need for me to discuss each of those instances.  Instead, I want to focus on larger construction needs and potential new resorts that should be added.

Magic Kingdom Resort Area:
Generally, the hotels of the Magic Kingdom resort area are the stalwarts of the Walt Disney World Resort.  The Grand Floridian, The Polynesian, The Contemporary.  There are just a couple of additions that I would propose to really cap off this area.

First, I would add a second tower to the Contemporary Resort area to balance the Bay Lake Tower addition.  This would take over the Garden Wing section and should be either a circular copy of the Bay Lake Tower or a new complimentary geometric shape.

New Contemporary Tower
Second, I would add a fourth resort to the Seven Seas Lagoon.  This hotel should be Fantasy themed.  Disney's Magic Kingdom Hotel.  This is to complete the theme.  The Grand Floridian reflects the past like Main Street, Liberty Square, and Frontierland.  The Polynesian represents adventure.  And the Contemporary looks to the future.  There is a need for a fantasy resort.

A place to sleep in a palace.  Tokyo is adding a new fantasy resort in its addition to DisneySea, and while I would not copy that architecture, I feel a similar resort here would be a very big draw.  For the architecture, I would look to French design.  Versailles.  Loire valley chateau, like the John Horney  concept art below.

Existing concept art to dust off and put to use
This hotel would be a great location for a royal table princess character dining meal and a third Bibbidi Bobbidi Boutique location.

The only question with the resort is where to put it.  There have been several plans for additional resorts along the Seven Seas Lagoon/Bay Lake.  Particularly the Venetian, the Persian, the Asian, and the Mediterranean in the old Venetian location.  The Asian location eventually became the Grand Floridan, but the Venetian/Mediterranean and Persian sites are still open.  Both locations have been deemed suitable for development (or at least marginally suitable), but evidence shows the Venetian/Mediterranean plot may be more expensive than desired due to the swampy condition of the land.

Magic Kingdom Area Hotel Plots

I would propose an alternate location for this fantasy resort.  The land north of the Grand Floridian also shows to be suitable (or at least marginally suitable) for development.  I would look to add the fantasy resort here.  This would keep it on the monorail line, would allow for a greater possible expansion plot, and would help continue a sidewalk/jogging path all around the Seven Seas Lagoon.  This would leave the Venetian/Mediterranean and Persian plots available for further development.

In those previously identified locations, I would actually propose alternate uses.  The Persian plot would make a good second location for another 360 immersive hotel like the upcoming Star Wars hotel.  It is a good isolated location that could be more tightly managed to keep the entire experience in the hotel immersed in the particular story to be told.  Good immersive themes for this hotel would be a Haunted Mansion resort or even an additional immersive princess/royalty experience (Renaissance on steroids with a Disney flair).

If the Venetian/Mediterranean plot can be developed, I think it would be much better served as a mixed use facility than strictly a hotel resort complex.  Something like the Boardwalk or Disney Springs lite.  Disney Center Port/Pier.  Shopping and dining on the first floor, hotel rooms on the second and third.  An option to relieve the crowds at Disney Springs and also to allow guests to come out of the Magic Kingdom and into one of the restaurants there.  Ticket and Transportation parking would be sufficient.  Arguably, this could be a part of the revitalization of Ticket and Transportation, bringing it out of the dated 90s look and into an integral part of this shopping and dining district.

Wilderness Lodge/Fort Wilderness Area:
I've previously discussed the potential hotel at Fort Wilderness.

Fort Wilderness Hotel
I feel these would be a good addition.  What I would add is the previously discussed narrow gauge train connecting the Wilderness Lodge and Fort Wilderness.  This has been long proposed to connect the two resorts, as well as to serve as a guide through the passage of time between the two settings.

Potential Train
I would dub this train the Wilderness Express and would seek to expand on the property in between these two locations.  There had been plans for a Wilderness Junction/Buffalo Junction Hotel in the middle.  This would be a great location for a more boutique hotel or even for another immersive hotel, themed to a wild west town.  Similar to the Hotel Cheyenne at Disneyland Paris.

Wilderness Junction Hotel
EPCOT Area:
EPCOT has a proposed new hotel for the entrance to the park.  Rumor has it that the hotel could completely envelop the entrance, so that you would pass under the hotel to enter the park, or it could flank the entrances. Another possibility is that it would be located in the current bus drop off area.

EPCOT Entrance Hotels

I'm partial to the hotel spanning the entrance.  I like how this has been done at other Disneyland resorts (Paris and Tokyo) and feel that with the appropriate design, the hotel could complement the view to Spaceship Earth very well.  This would require an accommodation for the monorail, but that could only serve to increase the hotel's popularity.  I can envision the hotel looking a lot like the design for the new Disneyland hotel.   For simplicity's sake, I would call this the EPCOT Hotel, especially given the proximity to the entrance.

The Yacht & Beach Club and Swan and Dolphin hotels are all well developed as is.  The Boardwalk Hotel is as well, though I feel there are additions that should be made to the actual boardwalk itself.

Proposed Boardwalk Additions
The Boardwalk needs more things to do. For a boardwalk, it is really uneventful. There are seven restaurants, one dueling piano bar, and a dance club.  The latter two primarily become cast member hangouts.  I would propose to add two attractions to give the boardwalk like.  A carousel in the garden behind the main entrance.  (It's a shame that a resort that has so much carousel theme does not actually have a carousel.)   And a Ferris wheel.  The Ferris wheel does not need to be the biggest or oversized like the Pixar Pal-Around at Disney California Adventure. This can be something a little closer to traveling fair size.  Especially as it will be a pay to use ride, with a necessarily lower capacity and likely lower demand.  I think these two attractions would go along way to giving a little vitality to the area, particularly at night.  The midway could be moved further around the boardwalk, opposite the Ferris wheel.  If desired, another carnival attraction, like the swings, could be added on this side.

This is also a good place to talk about the upcoming gondolas, as the end result is connecting a lot of resorts to EPCOT and Disney Hollywood Studios.  The current plan will connect the Art of Animation, Pop Century, Caribbean Beach, and Riviera resorts to both parks.

Current gondola plan (L) with proposed extension (R)

I would propose an extension of the gondola from where it turns to go the International Gateway at EPCOT.  This extension could connect it to the Coronado Springs Resort and potentially the new Swan and Dolphin extension.  This would at least tie the Coronado Springs Resort to a specific resort/location, as it is a bit isolated now.

Disney Hollywood Studios Area:
The main hotel in the Hollywood Studios Area will be the Star Wars hotel.  An immersive experience where you will be living Star Wars for your two or three night stay.

Star Wars Hotel Location identified above
This area does need a Disney Hollywood Hotel.  Disney has used Art Deco glitz and glamour for its Disney Hotel New York in Paris, Hollywood Hotel in Hong Kong, and Ambassador Hotel in Tokyo.  An Art Deco Hollywood Hotel would be a great addition to the park and would be a great opportunity to connect and create a Hollywood Studios Area.

There are a few options for the location.  I've indicated them on the map below.

Hollywood Hotel Options
I lean towards options one or two as they would help provide a bridge to a Hollywood Studios area with Caribbean Beach, Pop Century, and Art of Animation (the latter two would tie especially well with Disney Hollywood Studios).  Either location would work.  Ideally, there would be a park specific shuttle, perhaps like a stretch limo, to give guests of the hotel direct access to the park.

Disney Animal Kingdom Area:
The Animal Kingdom lodge and villas are beautiful resorts.  They may be two of the most beautiful resorts in all of Disney property.  Their only downside is their distance from other locations.  To keep the grounds for the animals on the savanna, there is a needed distance from everything else, which comes with the price of seclusion.  It is definitely worth the stay, but requires a car for ease of access (I would never tell anyone to rely solely on bus transportation here and the cost of uber or the Minnie Vans can add up quick).

One thing that could go a long way in easing the disconnected feel would be a transportation system connecting the lodge to the Animal Kingdom park.  Here, I would go with a train, like proposed Fort Wilderness and the Wilderness Lodge.  The Wildlife or Wildebeest Express. I can envision two different paths for the train.  One connecting you to the main entrance.  This would likely also require the reworking of the bus pick-up and drop off locations.  The second would be to connect to the Africa section of the park.  This in many ways makes the most sense to me.  It creates a unique perk for the resort and thematically ties the resort to the specific entrance.  This would require a security checkpoint and ticket gate at the lodge, but Disney has a history of this kind of transportation (the Disneyland monorail).

The Wildlife or Wildebeest Express proposed routes

Disney Springs Area:
The Disney Springs hotels all work and do not have a lot of room for expansion.  Port Orleans Riverside and French Quarter, Old Key West, and Saratoga Springs all offer different themes, tied together by the water.  All connected to Disney Springs by the boat transportation system, they each serve their purpose well.

As discussed in the Disney Springs post, the only thing I could add that I feel would make particularly the Saratoga Springs resort better utilized, is a night time entertainment show on Lake Buena Vista for Disney Springs.  Ideally the particular show would be visible from both sides of the lake.   My favorite option is still updating and moving the Electric Water Pageant to these waters.

ESPN Wide World of Sports Area:
The Wide World of Sport complex generally shares the All-Star Resorts (All-Star Sports, All-Star Music, and All-Star Movies).  These are the go to resorts for the various competition groups that are competing at the Complex.

The two could be better coordinated by creating a direct path from these resorts to the Complex.  I've envisioned a new path from the center of the All-Star resorts to the Complex.  I've included a new stadium pitched in the Olympics post with new parking, which could help serve as a new entrance complex.  I can see either dedicated mini-buses or vans running this route.  "Team shuttles".

All-Star Wide World of Sports Connection
Further, within the All-Star Complex,  I would add large capacity golf carts for intra-Resort traffic.  Like the kind that are used in Studio tours (all-star movies) or for sporting events (all-star sports).

We've used these at the Warner Bros. Studio Tour and they would work great for getting around between these three properties.  Tying them together to feel like a greater whole.

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With this, I think the Disney resorts are well situated for the years to come. And in light of all the additional hotels, motels, and non-Disney resorts just on the edge of property, there will be no shortage of rooms in the future for every price point.

Next time, general thoughts about the future of the Walt Disney Resort including thoughts on park number five.  Thanks, as always, for reading.