yensidtlaw1969
Well-Known Member
This isn't necessarily true - part of the issue with Splash's exterior maintenance was the real foliage, which required irrigation systems and landscaping effort both to look good and avoid deteriorating the rockwork around it. This has now mostly been replaced with faux foliage, which is not the flimsy plastic kind you'll find at your local craft store but rather metal and fiberglass construction made to look natural while still surviving Hurricane winds. Same kind of methods used in New Fantasyland and Pandora on their rockwork, neither of which are showing any real signs of fading. Heck, when a Firework started a fire on the roof of Seven Dwarfs Mine Train 10 years ago the fake foliage was fully replaced in a matter of days.Based on what they've done to the exterior of the ride, it's likely that aspect of the ride will degrade quicker and more noticeably than Splash. For Splash, the degradation largely affected the paint. But with Tiana, there's a ton of fake greenery adorning the mountain now. Weathering has the potential of making it look pretty worn down and faded quite quickly. That will probably be more expensive and difficult to repair than painted red clay. Plus Tiana's mossy rockwork will ALSO still need to be touched up every few years to keep it looking decent.
I don't know why you'd assume the mossy paint job would need any different level of maintenance than the red clay paint scheme. If anything the technology has gotten better over time at creating lightfast exterior paint. It does seem to require a little more artistic skill to paint, if that's what you mean, but the character paint department is fully capable of replicating their treatments more than once.