Hotels at my proposed Disney theme park (upon opening)

KentB3

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
I have here a list of the hotels which will be at my proposed 6th Disney theme park as of opening day. I had prepared a list earlier, but I had quite a bit of overbuild. This is a revised list of these hotels, which consists of 4 hotels plus a campground. 3 hotels run in the Deluxe to Moderate price range ($133+ per night), and the 4th is a Value-Priced resort ($70-$124 per night). These hotels are listed in order from most luxorious to least. Here is what I now have so far:

Disneyland Hotel: This is the crown jewel of the hotels at this proposed 6th Disney theme park. The architecture is very much like that of the Grand Floridian, but the layout is more like that of the Grand Californian, with all rooms in one building, and has six floors as opposed to the Grand Floridian and Grand Californian's five (I think). There are 600 rooms inside the Disneyland Hotel, which overlooks the Magic Kingdom theme park.

Disney's Hollywood Hotel: This hotel overlooks the Disney Studios theme park, and has a Hollywood theme to it, with somewhat of a Disney focus. The Hollywood Hotel is quite similar to the Hollywood Hotel in the soon-to-open Hong Kong Park, but may have a few differences as well. There are 502 rooms inside Disney's Hollywood Hotel, the same number as Disneyland's Paradise Pier Hotel.


Disney's Contemporary Resort: Overlooking the Magic Kingdom, the Contemporary Resort is similar to its WDW counterpart, but also has a number of differences as well; such as primarily different shops and restaurants. For example, Chef Mickey's is located in Downtown Disney instead of here, and is replaced by the Contemporary Café. The Contemporary Café has a character breakfast each morning, with a menu similar to Donald's Breakfastosarus, but stripped of its dinosaur/safari theming. Despite WDW having this, I chose the Contemporary, since I always found it to be a facinating building to look at; especially with the monorail going right through the building! There are 393 rooms inside the Contemporary; which is the same number as its WDW's counterpart has inside the tower. All rooms are inside the tower, as no annex wings have been built yet!

Disney's All-Stars Resort: Disney's All-Stars is similar to All-Star Movies at WDW, but with a focus on the characters instead of their movies. This is our Value resort, with rooms spanning 320 square feet (a bit larger than ASM's 260 square feet). The All-Stars is broken up into 10 buildings, with 78 rooms in each building (shaped like a straight rectangle as opposed to ASM's T-shaped inns) on three floors, with two buildings per theme. Here is what I have so far:

1.) 101 Dalmations: even thought this is the film's title, the 101 Dalmations are still the main characters!
2.) Buzz & Woody's: This is the Toy Story themed area, but the name was changed for reasons described above.
3.) The Little Mermaid: includes the Little Mermaid Pool, which comes with a shallower kiddie pool.
4.) Mickey & Donald's: features the big 5 (Mickey, Minnie, Donald, Goofy, & Pluto), along with their frequent costars (Daisy, Uncle Scrooge, Huey, Dewey, and Louie, etc.) Mickey & Donald's also features the Duck Pond Pool-- one of the 2 swimming pools in this resort, which includes a centerpiece of Donald and his other duck costars shooting water pistols into the pool, much like the Calypso Pool centerpiece at WDW's All-Star Music!
5.) Pooh Corner: features Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, Eeyore, et. al.

Disney's All-Stars has a total of 780 rooms, with room for expansion. The All-Stars Hall is the main building, which houses the offices, food court, snack bar, and lounge/bar.

Disneyland Campground: Similar to Fort Wilderness at WDW; Disneyland campground consists of 207 campsites (same number as Carowinds Campground at Paramount's Carowinds in Charlotte, NC), along with 108 cabins. This gives us a total of 315 "rooms"-- for lack of a better term! :D

The 4 hotels and the campground give us a Grand Total of 2,590 rooms/cabins/campsites combined-- slightly more than the number of hotel rooms at Disneyland (2,248 between its 3 hotels), but only about 1/12 the 30,000+ rooms/suites/villas/cabins/campsites WDW offers between its numerous resorts! Nevertheless, I think what I came up with for a new Disney theme park resort is sufficient. If anyone has questions, comments, and/or suggestions, please feel free to post! :)
 

KentB3

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
A few more revisions to my hotel lineup

I have made a few more revisions to my list of hotels which will be at my proposed 6th Disney theme park as of opening day. I still had a bit of overbuild. Once again, I have 4 hotels plus a campground. 3 hotels run in the Deluxe to Moderate price range ($133+ per night), and the 4th is a Value-Priced resort ($70-$124 per night). These hotels are listed in order from most luxorious to least. Here is what I now have so far:

Disneyland Hotel: This is the crown jewel of the hotels at this proposed 6th Disney theme park. The architecture is very much like that of the Grand Floridian, but the layout is more like that of the Grand Californian, with all rooms in one building, and has six floors as opposed to the Grand Floridian and Grand Californian's five (I think). There are 600 rooms inside the Disneyland Hotel, which overlooks the Magic Kingdom theme park.

Disney's Hollywood Hotel: This hotel overlooks the Disney Studios theme park, and has a Hollywood theme to it, with somewhat of a Disney focus. The Hollywood Hotel is quite similar to the Hollywood Hotel in the soon-to-open Hong Kong Park, but may have a few differences as well. There are 502 rooms inside Disney's Hollywood Hotel, the same number as Disneyland's Paradise Pier Hotel.


Disney's Contemporary Resort: Overlooking the Magic Kingdom, the Contemporary Resort is similar to its WDW counterpart, but also has a number of differences as well; such as primarily different shops and restaurants. For example, Chef Mickey's is located in Downtown Disney instead of here, and is replaced by the Contemporary Café. The Contemporary Café has a character breakfast each morning, with a menu similar to Donald's Breakfastosarus, but stripped of its dinosaur/safari theming. Despite WDW having this, I chose the Contemporary, since I always found it to be a facinating building to look at; especially with the monorail going right through the building! There are 393 rooms inside the Contemporary; which is the same number as its WDW's counterpart has inside the tower. All rooms are inside the tower, as no annex wings have been built yet!

Disney's All-Stars Resort: Disney's All-Stars is similar to All-Star Movies at WDW, but with a focus on the characters instead of their movies. This is our Value resort, with rooms spanning 320 square feet (a bit larger than ASM's 260 square feet). The All-Stars is broken up into 8 buildings, with 96 rooms in each building (shaped like a straight rectangle as opposed to ASM's T-shaped inns) on three floors, with two buildings per theme. Earlier, I had 78 rooms per building, but they came off a bit short in length to fit the themed outdoor areas for each set of characters. Here is what I now have:

1.) 101 Dalmations: even thought this is the film's title, the 101 Dalmations are still the main characters!
2.) Buzz & Woody's: This is the Toy Story themed area, but the name was changed for reasons described above..
3.) House of Mouse: This features the big 5 (Mickey, Minnie, Donald, Goofy, & Pluto), along with their frequent costars (Daisy, Uncle Scrooge, Huey, Dewey, and Louie, etc.) Mickey & Donald's also features the Duck Pond Pool-- which includes a centerpiece of Donald and his other duck costars shooting water pistols into the pool, much like the Calypso Pool centerpiece at WDW's All-Star Music! Earlier, I had 2 pools, but with less than half the number of rooms as the All-Star Resorts at WDW (1,920 per resort as opposed to this hotel resort's 768), I thought one pool would be sufficient. There is also a small, shallower kiddie pool next to the main one. The pool sits in the middle of the cluster of motel buildings, with the main building with offices, restaurants, etc. at one end, with room for expansion on the other end of the motel complex.

4.) Pooh Corner: features Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, Eeyore, et. al.

Disney's All-Stars has a total of 768 rooms, with room for expansion. The All-Stars Hall is the main building, which houses the offices, food court, snack bar, and lounge/bar.

Disneyland Campground: Similar to Fort Wilderness at WDW; Disneyland campground consists of 207 campsites (same number as Carowinds Campground at Paramount's Carowinds in Charlotte, NC), along with 108 cabins. This gives us a total of 315 "rooms"-- for lack of a better term! :D

The 4 hotels and the campground give us a Grand Total of 2,578 rooms/cabins/campsites combined-- slightly more than the number of hotel rooms at Disneyland (2,248 between its 3 hotels), but only about 1/12 the 30,000+ rooms/suites/villas/cabins/campsites WDW offers between its numerous resorts! Nevertheless, I think what I came up with for a new Disney theme park resort is sufficient. If anyone has questions, comments, and/or suggestions, please feel free to post! :)
 

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