More Disney World Land Sales

NJDVCMembers

Member
Original Poster
Disney is again selling off parcels of land. Here is the story from todays Orlando Sentinel.

It's a smaller world -- Disney sells more land

Scott Powers
Sentinel Staff Writer

May 25, 2006

More chunks of the Disney empire are being sold off for housing, including a 349-acre parcel going to the developers of the massive Horizon West community in west Orange County.

The new Disney land sales also include a 60-acre site south of Seidel Road that would be reserved for a new high school serving the Horizon West area.

The Walt Disney Co. reportedly is selling the 349-acre site, set around Panther Lake, north of Seidel and southeast of the Orange County National Golf Center, to Centex Homes.

The Reedy Creek Improvement District, the independent government agency that provides utilities and other services to Walt Disney World, is negotiating to sell the 60-acre site from its utility land holdings, said District Administrator Ray Maxwell. The buyers, who are undisclosed investors, would set it aside for the high school site that Orange County Public Schools has long sought in the area.

Reedy Creek also is selling a 50-acre tract, south of Seidel and just east of the high school reserve, to Centex. The district's board of supervisors authorized the sale of that land for residential development Wednesday, for the proposed price of $8.3 million. That's nearly $166,000 an acre, a price more than 50 percent higher than what some land in the area is listed for.

Andrea Finger, a spokeswoman for Walt Disney Imagineering, the Disney arm that oversees its land holdings, said she could not say how much the Disney tract might sell for because the deal is not yet closed. Likewise, Maxwell said he could not say how much the 60-acre school site might go for, though he told his board it would be far less per acre than the district expects for the residential site.

For Disney, the Panther Lake deal, if it closes, would be the largest Orange County land sale for independent development that the company has made in many years. Disney has sold more land in the Little Lake Bryan and Celebration areas, but the company carefully planned those developments first.

The theme park giant still owns about 30,000 acres in and around Walt Disney World.

Finger said the sales continue the company's new policy of divesting properties that no longer fit Disney's long-term plans. Three other parcels, totaling 130 acres, were put up for sale late last year and early this year. One of those, a 30-acre tract south of Disney World, is back on the market because an earlier deal fell through, she said.

"We're looking at our real estate portfolio. This [Panther Lake tract] is another of those parcels of land that are part of that program, to make sure our land uses complement our core business," she said. "So the land we're talking about, we're not feeling it's integral to our core entertainment business."

Finger would not confirm Centex as the buyer of the 349-acre site. However, on Wednesday Reedy Creek supervisors discussed that the property was going to Centex.

Division President Pat Knight of Maitland-based Centex Homes could not be reached for comment, and no one else from the company was available to discuss the transactions Wednesday.

Finger said that Disney supported the residential development plans for Horizon West, as "the most compatible use for this land."

The Disney tract and the two Reedy Creek parcels are about a mile northwest of the official boundaries of Walt Disney World.

The Disney property is outside the Reedy Creek district's governmental jurisdiction. However, the two other parcels are within the jurisdictional boundaries and would have to be dropped from the district if sold, Maxwell said.

Disney and Reedy Creek initially bought the land to have a place to discharge treated wastewater, by using it to irrigate citrus groves, a common practice in the region. But Disney and Reedy Creek are reducing that practice because technology allows them to use more of the parks' treated wastewater within Walt Disney World.

"We really have no good use for this particular property," Maxwell said.

None of the three parcels has been developed. They are part of the bucolic, rolling plains covered with occasional groves, woodlands, ponds and lakes that still dominate the area.

That will change. Horizon West is a 23,000-acre planned community stretching for miles in west Orange County. When built out, over several decades, it could house 30,000 people, plus a large commercial center. The Disney and Reedy Creek parcels now for sale already are included in the community's "village D" area, Maxwell said.

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Does this upset anyone else?

Don't know why it upsets us, it just does!


:cry: :cry:
 

napnet

Active Member
It should be fine. As discussed earlier, they have so much property they could easily sell some of it to make the area easier to manage. It also reduces the taxes they have to pay.
 

TheDisneyMagic

Well-Known Member
I don't mind to much at the moment if they sell off some land, but I hope they don't continue doing so, I know how much land they have but I don't want too much to be sold off.
 

gbruenin

Active Member
I guess I'm bothered more from the business side than the entertainment side. I recall that in the period after Walt died, quite a bit of energy was spent to prevent 'pirates' from taking control of the company and selling off bits and pieces. But here we are now, selling off real estate, selling off the radio station business, selling off the Disney Stores retail concept the company (mis)managed, selling off Vista United Communications (their phone company), selling off Celebration. I'm sure the number of people who would defend these sales as 'sound business decisions' is as long as a Space Mountain standby line on the 4th of July, but I just see it as short-term profit to boost the company bottom line, not sustainable revenue. Why was selling off bits and pieces bad before, but good now. :(
 

Glasgow

Well-Known Member
It's sad, but I guess times change. Disney is required to think of the stockholders these days, just like any other public company
 

peter11435

Well-Known Member
napnet said:
If you look at http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/96/DisneyLandByCompany.png, from my understanding, the sale is land that is in the area shaded black that is already seperated from the property. The lil point that sticks up all by its self on the north west side. Why would they need that property, especially since they dont own the land between it and the Magic Kingdom? I'd rather them sell off that land if it is unusable.
You are correct. So far all of the land they have sold would never have been utilized for WDW guests. Additionally none of the land was actually purchased by Walt. All of the parcels they have sold were purchased after Walt with specific (abandoned) ideas in mind including utilities and cast housing.
 

napnet

Active Member
peter11435 said:
You are correct. So far all of the land they have sold would never have been utilized for WDW guests. Additionally none of the land was actually purchased by Walt. All of the parcels they have sold were purchased after Walt with specific (abandoned) ideas in mind including utilities and cast housing.

Exactly, it looks like from that graphic that it was purchaced by RCID alot later in the years. I would believe part of it was for the percentage of land that will never be developed. Why not sell off the expensive land that would never be used and then purchace less expensive land farther away (like in Lake County) that would serve this purpose as well?

Now if this land was say right on Bay Lake, i would be worried, but i see no problem with selling off unusable parcels that are barely even usable for resorts or anything of that nature.
 

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