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Walt Disney World Resort
The
Walt Disney World Resort in Florida, USA is owned and
operated by The
Walt Disney Company and home to four theme parks, two water
parks, over 20 resort hotels and golf courses, and various shopping
and entertainment areas. Most of the Walt Disney Company's Central
Florida land, and all of the public areas, are located in the Cities
of Bay Lake and Lake Buena Vista, which are both contained in the
Reedy Creek Improvement District. These governmental entities, controlled
by the Walt Disney Company, are located southwest of Orlando and
a few miles northwest of Kissimmee. The Walt
Disney World Resort opened on October 1, 1971. It is the largest
theme park resort in the world, although Dubai Land, twice its size,
is planned to open in 2006.
Walt Disney World Concept
Walt
Disney's concept for Disney World was of a larger, more expansive
version of his first theme park, Disneyland,
so that it could constantly expand and not be as constrained by
the need for land that Disneyland suffered from. Walt Disney World
also was to be a sort of "Disneyland of the future" where
breakthroughs in science and technology could coexist with the original
Disney vision of themed entertainment.
Walt Disney also envisioned this project as incorporating a working
community where his ideas about urban planning could be tested.
He called this concept the "Experimental Prototype Community
(or City) of Tomorrow," or EPCOT. The theme park that eventually
opened under the Epcot name bore little resemblance to this vision,
though the neighboring planned community of Celebration, which was
founded by the Walt Disney Company, incorporates a few of the ideas.
Although he participated in much of the planning for the project,
Walt Disney himself died in 1966 and never got to see the realization
of his vision. The resort was originally to be named "Disney
World," but before its opening Walt's brother Roy renamed it
to "Walt Disney World" in his honor.
The land within Walt Disney World is part of the Reedy Creek Improvement
District which allows the Disney Corporation to exercise quasi-governmental
powers over the area.
Walt Disney World Properties
Walt Disney World has four major theme parks, each with a main
attraction or focal point that serves as its symbol:
- The
Magic Kingdom (Cinderella Castle)
- Epcot
(Spaceship Earth, the giant golf ball-looking geodesic sphere)
- Disney-MGM
Studios (the giant Mickey sorcerer's hat, though formerly
the 'Earful Tower' water tower represented it)
- Disney's Animal Kingdom (the Tree of Life)
There are also two water parks, Typhoon Lagoon and Blizzard Beach.
(A third, River Country, has been closed indefinitely.)
The Downtown Disney area contains many shopping, dining, and entertainment
venues, including DisneyQuest (a "virtual theme park"
inside a building), and a permanent Cirque du Soleil show (La Nouba).
Another notable aspect is the large number of hotel resort complexes
on the Walt Disney World property. The non-themed hotels are owned
by private, non-Disney hospitality companies such as Marriott and
Hilton. The themed resorts include:
- Disney's All-Star Movies Resort
- Disney's All-Star Music Resort
- Disney's All-Star Sports Resort
- Disney's Animal Kingdom Lodge
- Disney's Beach Club Resort
- Disney's Beach Club Villas
- Disney's BoardWalk Inn
- Disney's BoardWalk Villas
- Disney's Caribbean Beach Resort
- Disney's Contemporary Resort
- Disney's Coronado Springs Resort
- Disney's Fort Wilderness Resort & Campground
- Disney's Grand Floridian Resort and Spa
- Disney's Old Key West Resort
- Disney's Polynesian Resort
- Disney's Pop Century Resort
- Disney's Port Orleans Resort Riverside (formerly named Dixie
Landings)
- Disney's Port Orleans Resort French Quarter
- Disney's Saratoga Springs Resort & Spa (formerly the Disney
Institute)
- Disney's Wilderness Lodge
- Disney's Yacht Club Resort
- Shades of Green (named because of its location between two golf
courses; it's currently leased by the United States Department
of Defense and used for vacationing active and retired military
personnel and their families)
- The Villas at Disney's Wilderness Lodge
- Walt Disney World Dolphin (operated by Starwood)
- Walt Disney World Swan (operated by Starwood)
The Walt Disney World resort also includes five world-class golf
courses. The five 18-hole golf courses are the Magnolia, the Palm,
Lake Buena Vista, Eagle Pines, and Osprey Ridge (the last two are
part of the Bonnet Creek Golf Club). There are two miniature golf
courses: Fantasia Gardens and Winter Summerland.
Walt Disney World paved the way for many other theme parks and
attractions in the area, including SeaWorld and Universal Studios,
and helped make Orlando a popular tourist destination for people
from all over the world.
When the Magic Kingdom opened in 1971, the Walt Disney World Resort
employed about 5,500 cast members. Today it employs more than 52,000
cast members, spending more than $1.1 billion on payroll and $478
million on benefits each year. The largest single-site employer
in the United States, Walt Disney World Resort has more than three
thousand job classifications.
In a March 30, 2004 article in the Orlando Sentinel, Walt Disney
World president Al Weiss gave some insight into how the parks are
maintained:
- More than 5,000 cast members are dedicated to maintenance and
engineering, including 650 horticulturists and 600 painters.
- Disney spends more than US$100 million every year on maintenance
at the Magic Kingdom. In 2003, US$6 million was spent on renovating
its Crystal Palace restaurant. 90 percent of guests say that the
upkeep and cleanliness of the Magic Kingdom are excellent or very
good.
- The streets in the parks are steam cleaned every night.
- There are cast members permanently assigned to painting the
antique carousel horses; they use genuine gold leaf.
- There is a tree farm on-site, so that when a mature tree needs
to be replaced, a thirty-year-old tree will be available to replace
it.
There is a fleet of Disney-operated buses on property, branded
Disney Transport, free for use by resort and park guests, though
drivers rarely check. Two monorail lines also operate at Walt Disney
World Resort: one links the Magic Kingdom, the Contemporary and
Polynesian and Grand Floridian resorts, and the Transportation and
Ticket Center (with an express track in the other direction, only
stopping at the TTC and the Magic Kingdom); the other links Epcot
and the Transportation and Ticket Center.
Popular Walt Disney World attractions
Magic
Kingdom
- The Haunted Mansion
- Pirates of the Caribbean
- "it's a small world"
- Space Mountain
- Splash Mountain
- Big Thunder Mountain Railroad
Epcot
- Test Track
- Mission: SPACE
- Spaceship Earth
- Soarin'
- Maelstrom
Disney-MGM
Studios
- The Great Movie Ride
- Rock 'n' Roller Coaster
- The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror
- Star Tours
- Fantasmic!
Disney's Animal Kingdom
- Kilimanjaro Safaris
- Kali River Rapids
- It's Tough to be a Bug
- DINOSAUR (formerly named Countdown to Extinction)
- Festival of the Lion King
Walt Disney World History and Development
In 1959, the Walt Disney Company, under the leadership of Walt
Disney, began looking for land for a second resort to supplement
Disneyland, which had opened in 1955. Market surveys revealed that
only 2% of Disneyland's visitors came from east of the Mississippi
River, where 75% of the population of the United States lived. Additionally,
Walt Disney disliked the businesses that had sprung up around Disneyland,
and wanted control of a much larger area of land for the new project.
Walt Disney first flew over the Orlando, Florida site, one of many,
on November 22, 1963. He saw the good road network, including Interstate
4 and Florida's Turnpike, with McCoy Air Force Base, soon to become
Orlando International Airport, to the east, and immediately fell
in love with the site. When later asked why he chose it, he said,
"the freeway routes, they bisect here."
However, the decision had not been made yet; no land had been purchased.
If the news of Disney's new resort was leaked, land prices would
soar. Thus everything was to be done in complete secrecy. To avoid
a burst of land speculation, Disney used various dummy corporations
and cooperative individuals to acquire 27,400 acres (111 km²)
of land. The first five-acre (20,000 m²) lot was bought on
October 23, 1964 by the Ayefour Corporation (a pun on Interstate
4). In May 1965, major land transactions were being recorded a few
miles southwest of Orlando in Osceola County. Two large tracts totalling
$1.5 million were sold, and smaller tracts of flatlands and cattle
pastures were purchased by exotic-sounding companies such as the
Latin-American Development and Management Corporation and the Reedy
Creek Ranch Corporation. In addition to three huge parcels of land
were many smaller parcels, referred to as "outs". Much
of the land had been platted into five-acre (20,000 m²) lots
in 1912 by the Munger Land Company and sold to investors. In most
cases, the owners were happy to get rid of the land, being mostly
swampland. Yet another problem was the mineral rights to the land,
owned by Tufts College. Without the transfer of these rights, Tufts
could come in at any time and demand the removal of buildings to
obtain minerals.
After most of the land had been bought, the story was leaked to
the Orlando Sentinel on October 20, 1965. A press conference was
soon organized for November 15. At the conference, Walt Disney explained
the plans for the site, including EPCOT, the Experimental Prototype
Community of Tomorrow, which was to be a futuristic city.
The Reedy Creek Drainage District was incorporated on May 13, 1966
under Florida State Statutes Chapter 298, which gives powers including
eminent domain to special Drainage Districts. To create the District,
only the support of the landowners within was required.
Walt Disney died on December 15, 1966. From then on, his brother
Roy Disney headed the project. For the past few years that the project
had been in pre-production, it had been known simply as Disney World,
but Roy Disney added "Walt" to the name to make it Walt
Disney World. In his own words: "Everyone has heard of the
Ford cars. But have they all heard of Henry Ford, who started it
all? Walt Disney World is in memory of the man who started it all,
so people will know his name as long as Walt Disney World is here."
On February 2, 1967, Roy Disney held a press conference in Winter
Park, Florida. The role of EPCOT was emphasized in the film that
was played, the last one recorded by Walt Disney before his death.
After the film, it was explained that, for Walt Disney World to
succeed, a special district would have to be formed: the Reedy Creek
Improvement District with two cities inside it, the City of Bay
Lake and the City of Reedy Creek (now the City of Lake Buena Vista).
In addition to the standard powers of an incorporated city, which
include tax-free bonds, the Improvement District would have total
immunity from any current or future county or state land-use laws.
The only areas where the District had to submit to the county and
state would be property taxes and elevator inspections.
The laws forming the District and the two Cities was signed into
law on May 12, 1967. The Florida Supreme Court ruled in 1968 that
the District was allowed to issue tax-exempt bonds for public projects
within the district, despite the sole beneficiary being The Walt
Disney Company.
Construction of drainage canals was soon begun by the Improvement
District, and Disney built the first roads and the Magic Kingdom.
Disney's Contemporary Resort, Disney's Polynesian Resort, and Disney's
Fort Wilderness Resort and Campground were also completed in time
for the park's opening on October 1, 1971.
On opening day, Roy Disney gave an opening dedication, after which
he asked Walt's widow Lillian what she thought of Walt Disney World.
She replied, "I think Walt would have approved."
Walt Disney World Timeline
October 1, 1971 Magic Kingdom
Disney's Contemporary Resort
Disney's Polynesian Resort
Disney's Fort Wilderness Resort and Campground
1972 Disney's Village Resort (Treehouse and Vacation Villas)
1973 Disney's Golf Resort (later Disney Inn, now Shades of
Green)
1974 Discovery Island
1975 Disney's Village Resort (Fairway Villas)
March 1975 Walt Disney Village Marketplace (now Downtown
Disney Marketplace)
June 1976 Disney's River Country Water Park
1980 Walt Disney World Conference Center
Disney's Village Resort (Club Lake Villas)
October 1, 1982 Epcot
1988 Disney's Grand Floridian Resort
Disney's Caribbean Beach Resort
May 1, 1989 Disney-MGM Studios
June 1, 1989 Disney's Typhoon Lagoon Water Park
Pleasure Island
1990 Disney's Yacht and Beach Club Resorts
Walt Disney World Swan
Walt Disney World Dolphin
1991 Disney's Port Orleans Resort
Disney's Old Key West Resort
1992 Disney's Dixie Landings Resort (now Port Orleans Riverside)
Disney Vacation Club at Walt Disney World
Bonnet Creek Golf Club
1994 Disney's All-Star Sports Resort
Disney's Wilderness Lodge
1995 Disney's All-Star Music Resort
April 1, 1995 Disney's Blizzard Beach Water Park
July 1995 Disney's Fairy Tale Wedding Pavilion
1996 Disney Institute
Disney's Boardwalk Resort
1997 Disney's Coronado Springs Resort
March 1997 Disney's Wide World of Sports
September 1997 Downtown Disney West Side
April 22, 1998 Disney's Animal Kingdom
June 1998 DisneyQuest
1999 Disney's All-Star Movies Resort
April 2001 Disney's Animal Kingdom Lodge
December 4, 2003 Disney's Pop Century Resort
Walt Disney World Ticket Prices
Disney's "Magic Your Way" park ticket pricing, introduced
in January 2005, is intended to make guests choose to spend more
days on Disney property instead of visiting competing theme parks
in the area; additional days at Disney can be much less expensive
than a day at another park.
Length Adult ticket price (in US dollars) The price increase to
add this day
1-Day $59.75
2-Day $119 $59.25
3-Day $171 $52
4-Day $185 $14
5-Day $193 $8
6-Day $196 $3
7-Day $199 $3
"Magic Your Way" also offers add-on options such as Park
Hopper ($35 per ticket, allowing a guest to visit more than one
park per day), Magic Plus Pack ($45 per ticket, giving a guest between
2 and 5 visits to water parks, Pleasure Island, DisneyQuest, or
Disney's Wide World of Sports), and No Expiration (between $10 and
$55 per ticket, without which the ticket will expire 14 days after
its first use).
Disney is also planning a service named "Disney's Magical
Express" whereby guests will be brought in Disney buses from
the Orlando airport directly to their Disney resort, and their luggage
will be picked up and brought to their room. The plan is to make
a Disney vacation simple and convenient, while making a visit to
another local park such as Universal Orlando Resort or SeaWorld
inconvenient.
See Also
Magic
Kingdom
Epcot
Disney-MGM
Studios
Disney's Animal Kingdom
This article is licensed from Wikipedia under the GNU
Free Documentation License.
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