Avatar 3D ride news

afar28

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
Found this post and thought a new thread should be started as I did not see anything about it. Feel free to move if it belongs in an existing avatar thread
Design plans for that attraction call for a massive, five- or six-story theater building, which will top out somewhere around 80 feet. The building will include four show theaters, which will radiate from a central hub from where visitors will load into the theaters.

Two of the four theaters will be ADA-compatible (more about that in a minute), and plans show three ride levels in the show building. The indoor portion of the queue will snake through a shorter building to the side of the main theater building. Just as the queue enters the theater building, the queue will split, and visitors will be sent onto one of two ramps. The left ramp will descend slightly to the first show level, while the right ramp will ascend to the second show level.

On each level, groupers will split their portion of the queue into four groups, to load each of the four theaters. Once directed to their theater, visitors will pick up their 3D glasses before entering a small pre-show room. From there, visitors will walk through a load vestibule before emerging into their theater. It appears that some of the visitors sent to the second show level will ascend to a third show level after they've been assigned their theater and picked up their glasses.

Although this attraction's been compared widely to Soarin', the load procedure implied by these blueprints would be compared better with Universal's The Simpsons Ride. On Soarin', everyone enters the theaters on one level, to board ride vehicles that then ascend to one of three show levels. On Simpsons and on Avatar, visitors will walk up ramps or steps to their ride level, although the ride vehicles may further elevate from those levels.

Visitors will face curved IMAX-style screens during the show, then will exit through one of two unload vestibules. The plans show visitors on the second and third show levels descending stairs to exit the building, so I presume that all wheelchairs parties will be sent to the first show level to board the attraction. In addition, the two ADA-compatible theaters exit the building at that first show level, while visitors from the two other theaters descend one more floor in their unload vestibule down to an exit corridor that crosses underneath the theater building, so that all four theaters can exit on the same side of the building.

I don't think anyone needs three guesses to figure out that's so all riders can exit into the attraction's gift shop.

What we don't know from these plans are what the ride vehicles will look like, though the plans suggest that they will be suspended from the building's ceiling. Nor, of course, do we know anything about the setting or storyline of the movie itself, beyond what Disney announced at the D23 Expo in Japan — that visitors would fly through the skies of Pandora. However, with four theaters and IMAX-style screens, we do know that this will be one massive show building.
So it looks like it will just be an upgraded version of Soarin. If this is the anchor of the land it will be a bit disappointing in my opinion
Full article here
 

jdmdisney99

Well-Known Member
Found this post and thought a new thread should be started as I did not see anything about it. Feel free to move if it belongs in an existing avatar thread

So it looks like it will just be an upgraded version of Soarin. If this is the anchor of the land it will be a bit disappointing in my opinion
Full article here
Seems like the Vekoma system. Not anything less than I expected, sadly...
 

RandomPrincess

Keep Moving Forward
"Although this attraction's been compared widely to Soarin', the load procedure implied by these blueprints would be compared better with Universal's The Simpsons Ride. On Soarin', everyone enters the theaters on one level, to board ride vehicles that then ascend to one of three show levels. On Simpsons and on Avatar, visitors will walk up ramps or steps to their ride level, although the ride vehicles may further elevate from those levels."

At the end of the article the also say it looks like the ride cars will be hanging from the ceiling so a combo of Simpsons/BTTF and Soarin'
 
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ABQ

Well-Known Member
I certainly hope it's nothing like the load system for Soarin, one big problem with that ride, that is not often mentioned is how single riders get hosed every time with a crappy seat at the end with a great view of the side of the screen. 3D At sucha bad angle is never enjoyable.
 

wedenterprises

Well-Known Member
I always thought it would be cool to attach ride vehicles in a baby mobile configuration and spin them around. Then each vehicle could also tilt/rotate/ascend/descend. too bad they couldn't do this and create a swarm of dragons or whatever they're called in avatar. Above and below you would be other guests.

felt+owl+baby+mobile+Etsy+5.jpg
 

GoofGoof

Premium Member
Is this just a recycle of the "leaked plans" from last year or a new rumor? These sights all seem to just recycle rumors so it's hard to tell when there is new info out there and when they are just out of content so recycling old rumors.
 

GeneralKnowledge

Well-Known Member
They really should just call this thing Soarin' over Pandora. That way they could really save money on having to manufacture attraction-specific merchandise and just sell Soarin' merchandise there.
 

Tom

Beta Return

Yup. The article sounds like a regurgitation of something written just over a year ago. It describes the original plans almost perfectly, including the citation of two ADA theaters.

If Disney uses the plans we saw last year, it will be a 3D multi-level attraction, similar to Soarin but with loading on multiple levels. The ride vehicles will consist of a few rows of seats on an arm that telescopes out into the viewing area. It will use large screens similar to Soarin.

The entry queue will be a long, winding ramp that ultimately splits up into ramps that take guests to one of three ride levels. Guests will exit from the opposite end of the apparatus, through some hallways, and down flights of stairs to grade.
 

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