joanna71985
Well-Known Member
Let's try this: it seemed very strange for Disney Parks to run a zoo.
I don't think it is. I love seeing the animals at AK
Let's try this: it seemed very strange for Disney Parks to run a zoo.
In 2018 and 2019 DAK was the second most visited park in Florida and the third most visited park in the USjudging by Animal Kingdom's poor performance.
AK is my second favourite WDW park, just under Epcot. If they keep whittling away at Epcot like they have, it might be my last reason to visit WDW rather than just sticking to DLR and overseas parks. I'm sure not traveling to the resort for WDW or DHS.If you're talking the conversation over the past few days, the idea is simply that the guests have been expecting more of the cute animals in spite of Rohde's intentions, from what I can tell. Rohde's idea might have worked for a large land in a theme park, but apparently not for an entire Disney park, judging by Animal Kingdom's poor performance.
So, you're going to have to be flexible.
Rohde might have had better luck designing a zoo , instead of a Nahtazu.
This.
"I have a fever, and the only treatment is... more movie IP in the parks" - Bob Iger (while wearing a leather jacket he tried on for a photo op while touring a Disney recording studio)
New engineering plans?
Utter nonsense. Stop now.
Shanghai and Florida have different building codes and even a small change to accomodate code could set off a domino effect of other changes.
Sadly, I think the movie franchise/IP mandate has become so ubiquitous that Disney fans have come to think it is necessary just as TWDC management does.
If you're talking the conversation over the past few days, the idea is simply that the guests have been expecting more of the cute animals in spite of Rohde's intentions, from what I can tell. Rohde's idea might have worked for a large land in a theme park, but apparently not for an entire Disney park, judging by Animal Kingdom's poor performance.
So, you're going to have to be flexible.
Indeed. I doubt Shanghai codes anticipate hurricanes. Not to mention the conversion from metric to imperial.
@DonniePeverley, your concept of 'cloning is easy' is way too naive. I do hope you get a chance to visit Epic Universe when it opens since you claimed it was never going to be built. So, try some humility in that you may not know everything.
When we built Shanghai Disney their were codes/design criteria for wind/typhons. Building in Shanghai is like building in London, Hong Kong, or NYC with government restrictions/codes, ect.It probably does! They'd just call them typhoons.
Well, actually they'd call them whatever the proper word is in Mandarin, but you get it.
Indeed. I doubt Shanghai codes anticipate hurricanes. Not to mention the conversion from metric to imperial.
@DonniePeverley, your concept of 'cloning is easy' is way too naive. I do hope you get a chance to visit Epic Universe when it opens since you claimed it was never going to be built. So, try some humility in that you may not know everything.
You do realize Shanghai Disney is not owned by WDW right?So you have plans and drawings for a land in in a park in Shanghai. The rides concept, technology, testing is all done. It's been tested to glowing reviews.
How can anyone argue to try and 'clone' this, with the slight changes in climate, land, etc .... will not be cost effective, as making something brand new, testing, paying huge amounts to the creative intelligence behind new attractions, etc
Only on this forum and just to feel argumentative can anyone argue otherwise.
You do realize Shanghai Disney is not owned by WDW right?
WDW is a minority partner in the project. The majority owner Shanghai Shendi Group, which is a tri-venture state owned investment group. So leaving aside all the work you would need to modify the designs for use in different countries, with different codes, different restrictions (and of course assuming you think the same offering in the Asian market are going to work in the US) legally they are not WDW's plans and drawings to use.
The organization of Disney ( Walt Disney World isn’t acting independently or investing in foreign parks) means there are no legal hurdles to using the designs from one park at another, even the ones they do not fully own. The only exception is exclusivity agreements which are the exception, not the rule. Disney owns the designs and their contracts are written as such.You do realize Shanghai Disney is not owned by WDW right?
WDW is a minority partner in the project. The majority owner Shanghai Shendi Group, which is a tri-venture state owned investment group. So leaving aside all the work you would need to modify the designs for use in different countries, with different codes, different restrictions (and of course assuming you think the same offering in the Asian market are going to work in the US) legally they are not WDW's plans and drawings to use.
Would love that, sadly that was a different era in Disney. Doubt we'll ever see anything like that againIdeally - the attraction inside the DAK park icon would not be dedicated to a single IP or a cartoon.
Something a little more artsy / natural would be really lovely.
Ideally - the attraction inside the DAK park icon would not be dedicated to a single IP or a cartoon.
Something a little more artsy / natural would be really lovely.
Yes - they just released sea lionsIs DisneyNature still a thing?
Damned penguin killers!!!Yes - they just released sea lions
Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.