I think it is the totality of all the offerings in one place that will set DTD apart from just about anywhere else in the US. Certainly the southeast.
Unfortunately Jt, you know very little about the Southeast. Restrain your commentary accordingly.
I think it is the totality of all the offerings in one place that will set DTD apart from just about anywhere else in the US. Certainly the southeast.
At first I thought this thread was announcing the name of the new passage that will be added behind RR. :lol:
Not sure what this means for changes to HW. I think when they announce what is happening in some of the other venues it will be clearer. Sounds like Disney has had some success with the DL DTD business model and want to bring some of that to WDW. Fortunately we have much more space than DL for other offerings too. Fingers crossed the HW concept still has a green light because I still think it is a winner.
Why would any retailer move into the center of a ghost town?
Sounds like Disney has had some success with the DL DTD business model and want to bring some of that to WDW. Fortunately we have much more space than DL for other offerings too.
The've had success with the Disneyland model, no doubt. But that Downtown Disney is located right outside the parks and hotels...walking (or in some cases, falling) distance from where everybody already is. A mix of stores and restaurants that you see at upscale malls is perfect in that spot.
But WDW DtD has to function as a destination itself, not a complementary offering. Hyperion Wharf needs to be a destination, and putting in more upscale, but not unique, retail, just ain't gonna do it.
Really great points there! And for those who haven't been to Disneyland, the mention of "falling" into Anaheim's Downtown Disney is not a reference to drunkards stumbling back from the House of Blues. :lol:
It's a reference to the fact that rows and rows of Grand Californian Hotel room balconies sit above a long stretch of Downtown Disney.
Here's the view of Downtown Disney from one of the Grand Californian rooms, looking west towards the opposite end of Downtown Disney and the towers of the Disneyland Hotel sitting at the other end where Apricot Lane is now.
Balcony view of Downtown Disney and the Disneyland Hotel, from a Grand Californian Hotel room
View of Downtown DIsney from hotel balcony by karlb, on Flickr
In addition to 3,000+ Disney-owned hotel rooms being literally steps away from Downtown Disney in Anaheim, the massive parking lot tram operation loads/unloads directly across from the World of Disney store and the entrance to the mall area. (The four-station tram loading area is directly on the other side of the landscaped area at the right of the picture above) At the end of the night both Disneyland and DCA empty out and direct most of the 22 Million theme park visitors at Disneyland Reosrt each year head towards the tram loading area at Downtown Disney.
It's all literally steps from each other, in a very compact and multi-layered planned urban environment. Housing built above retail/dining adjacent to mass transportation.
WDW's Downtown Disney doesn't have that benefit, as even some of the hotels in Lake Buena Vista are quite a prohibitive walk away, especially in the Florida climate most of the year. Downtown Disney in Orlando, specifically Hyperion Wharf for the sake of this conversation, needs to be different than Anaheim's Downtown Disney. WDW's Downtown Disney has to attract people on its own, it has to be its own magnet competing against the other theme parks and area attractions screaming for the tourists time and dollars.
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The concept art also showed a Silk Road restaurant in the Mannequins building. If that was actually coming we don't know but it was the name of a real restaurant but I think I read the company went bankrupt.
I think it is the totality of all the offerings in one place that will set DTD apart from just about anywhere else in the US. Certainly the southeast.
It doesn't seem like the kind of store I would expect to find in DTD.
jt, your disdain for the southeastern US is amazing. Search for shopping districts in any medium size or larger city in Dixie, and you'll find many different high end shopping malls, INCLUDING in Orlando! Up here in Jacksonville, we have the St. Johns Town Center, which is quite upscale, including a Tiffany, Coach, Apple store, and many others. The area also includes several high end restaurants - Capital Grill, Cantina Laredo, Mitchell's Fish Markety, j. alexander, P.F. Chang, Cheesecake Factory...and in the evenings, some of these have (gasp) outdoor bars to serve waiting clients adult beverages!
Downtown Disney, and the area formerly known as Pleasure Island, has become nothing more than another shopping mall. Admit it, and get over it - TDO messed up big time.
Downtown Disney, and the area formerly known as Pleasure Island, has become nothing more than another shopping mall. Admit it, and get over it - TDO messed up big time.
I disagree. The Marketplace has some fun restaurants, and some of the best shops at Disney, not to mention a fantastic ice cream shop. This has always been what The Marketplace is. Not to mention the fact that the setting is picture perfect.
The West Side has a bit left to it with Magic Masters, House of Blues, Planet Hollywood, and Cirque De Soleil.
Pleasure Island is the disaster of DTD. The lack of imagination that has gone into that area astounds me.
What lack of imagination? They have not even started major construction yet.
What lack of imagination? They have not even started major construction yet.
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