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DisneylandForward

britain

Well-Known Member
Doesn't HKDL have 3, not 4? Just land reserved for a fourth which, as far as I know, hasn't been announced. Not sure of the average occupancy there but if it's 80%+ and with the upcoming Marvel expansion, sure maybe it's worth the fourth.

And Shanghai, as we know, is actively preparing for their second gate, to which the fourth hotel is a key connectivity point between the first and second gates, in addition to more lodging capacity.

Both resorts are significantly different beasts from DLR in terms of maturity and tourist mix that would call into question anything more than a single hotel add without adding an additional park, IMO.
On the topic of the Shanghai second gate: This will be fascinating to see what its identity will be, and very telling for what Disney thinks its top priorities should be.

This will be Disney’s first second gate built since the rise and spectacular fall of the “studio park” concept. Every change to the two studio parks (or 3 if you count DCA) since then has been steering in the direction of large single IP lands.

Based on that behavior, one may expect SDR’s second gate to be another Disney Adventure World just with better bones built from scratch.

That indeed could happen.

Odds are that it will happen.

But if it DOESN’T happen, if maybe, just maybe they aim higher again… what might that more inspiring concept be?

Do they reinvent the other high-concept parks? (EPCOT, TDS, or AK). Or do they try something completely different?

I don’t think it’s over stating to say that regardless of how many billions they plan to spend and whatever yada yada story they spin about it, THIS decision will show D’Amaro’s true colors, and will be a ceiling on just how “back” WDI can get.
 

Disney Analyst

Well-Known Member
Sorry yes, miscounted. It’s probably better to just count revenue rooms if I’m being honest.

Disneyland - 2400
Tokyo Disney - 2300
HKDL - 1700
SDL - 1200 (~1700 soon) +?500 with the fourth
DLP - 5700

When I replied to the context I also meant contextually if there is a built out Disneyland forward. Not today. As is, DLR would seem to have occupancy loads to support another hotel, though my suspicion is they’d want more significant DVC sell through first and that’s probably the key factor stalling hotel 4. A fully built out DLF I don’t see much reason they couldn’t float a 5th.

And I know why people do not want TS lot turned into a hotel oasis, but there’s quite a lot of sensibility to put a Disney hotel down there. It would tap into the convention crowd as well. As would some dining.

I’d really like a more budget friendly Disney hotel at Disneyland… the current three are ridiculous.
 

DrStarlander

Well-Known Member
I don't understand why some are so adamantly against more hotel expansion.
I'm not against hotels, I just want something akin to the gorgeous hotels we've seen built at the overseas resorts. Those are hotels I want to see from the park, not avert my gaze in disgust.

I'd love a few fantastic themed hotels as part of Westcot at TS. I want to sit at an outdoor French bistro cafe by the fountains and feel like I'm in Paris, then go up to my Haussmannian hotel suite overlooking the park's lagoon. Or sit by the outdoor après-ski vibe fireplace after dinner, then head up to my Swiss ski lodge themed hotel room in an elevator cabin themed like an Alps gondola. I want ambition and creativity and a stay that's out of the ordinary.
 

Distorian

Active Member
I'm not against hotels, I just want something akin to the gorgeous hotels we've seen built at the overseas resorts. Those are hotels I want to see from the park, not avert my gaze in disgust.

I'd love a few fantastic themed hotels as part of Westcot at TS. I want to sit at an outdoor French bistro cafe by the fountains and feel like I'm in Paris, then go up to my Haussmannian hotel suite overlooking the park's lagoon. Or sit by the outdoor après-ski vibe fireplace after dinner, then head up to my Swiss ski lodge themed hotel room in an elevator cabin themed like an Alps gondola. I want ambition and creativity and a stay that's out of the ordinary.
Integrating the hotels into World Showcase ala Mira Costa at TDS is the kind of intelligent, pragmatic, artistic, high level thinking that won’t get you a job at WDI. You need to think “how can we waste as much space as possible?”
 

DrStarlander

Well-Known Member
Integrating the hotels into World Showcase ala Mira Costa at TDS is the kind of intelligent, pragmatic, artistic, high level thinking that won’t get you a job at WDI. You need to think “how can we waste as much space as possible?”
They tend to like their domestic theme parks and hotels like my kid wanted his dinner: everything separated and nothing can be touching each other.
 

TP2000

Well-Known Member


Just watch, all those permits are because they got a sale on new green vinyl tents for the 25 year old security checkpoints.

Screenshot 2026-03-04 11.59.23 PM.png
 

Vegas Disney Fan

Well-Known Member
If they did build a hotel at Toy Story Parking Lot and there wasn't a third gate there, they could market it as a moderate resort (a bit like Saratoga Springs at Disney Springs). That's one of the major issues with Disneyland's hotels is that they are very expensive compared to nearby hotels and there aren't as many perks for staying at a Disney Hotel at the moment
I think the Toy Story lot needs substantial attractions of some sort or it’s doomed to fail.

Why would anyone choose to stay at a Disney hotel that’s further away from the parks than the dozens of non Disney hotels? Even moderate Disney rates would still be far more expensive than all the closer non Disney hotels.

We get Hilton employee rates so we normally stay at the big Hilton by the convention center or the Suncoast on Clementine (because we get them for $50 a night) and the walk is a major drawback to both, the only way the TS lot makes sense is as a 3rd gate or if they connect it via a monorail, skyliner, or people mover to make it extremely easy to get to, even then I think it would need substantial attractions to make it an attractive place to stay. No one is going to pay luxury, or even moderate, prices to be a mile away from the primary destination and walk past dozens of cheaper hotels for the privilege.
 
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DrStarlander

Well-Known Member
I think the Toy Story lot needs substantial attractions of some sort or it’s doomed to fail.
I think programmatically a TS park would be something like this at full build-out and opening with around 8 or 9 of these:
  1. New innovative E-ticket exclusive to this park (120k sq. ft.)
  2. Trackless all-ages dark ride (50k sq. ft.)
  3. Boat all-ages dark ride (80k sq. ft.)
  4. Outdoor all-ages scenic boat ride (60k sq. ft)
  5. Flying theater (60k sq. ft.)
  6. Themed family coaster (100k sq. ft.)
  7. Omnimover all-ages targeting (40k sq. ft.)
  8. Simulator (50k sq. ft.)
  9. Carousel (10k sq. ft.)
  10. Flat ride #1 (10k sq. ft.)
  11. Flat ride #2 (10k sq. ft.)
  12. 4D/screen theater show with some animatronics (40k sq. ft.)
  13. Kids play area (20k sq. ft.)
The exclusive innovative E-ticket ride would be going to be doing a lot of heavy-lifting as the "must see/do" attraction. It would be the park's RSR.
 

GravityFalls

Active Member
On the topic of the Shanghai second gate: This will be fascinating to see what its identity will be, and very telling for what Disney thinks its top priorities should be.

This will be Disney’s first second gate built since the rise and spectacular fall of the “studio park” concept. Every change to the two studio parks (or 3 if you count DCA) since then has been steering in the direction of large single IP lands.

Based on that behavior, one may expect SDR’s second gate to be another Disney Adventure World just with better bones built from scratch.

That indeed could happen.

Odds are that it will happen.

But if it DOESN’T happen, if maybe, just maybe they aim higher again… what might that more inspiring concept be?

Do they reinvent the other high-concept parks? (EPCOT, TDS, or AK). Or do they try something completely different?

I don’t think it’s over stating to say that regardless of how many billions they plan to spend and whatever yada yada story they spin about it, THIS decision will show D’Amaro’s true colors, and will be a ceiling on just how “back” WDI can get.

A lot has changed since the 90's, but the themes for the three domestic were partially chosen to position Disney against local competitors.

ThemeLocal CompetitorDisney
Studio BacklotUniversal OrlandoHollywood Studios
Animals / AfricaBusch Gardens TampaAnimal Kingdom
CaliforniaKnott's Berry FarmCalifornia Adventure

So if that's the strategy, then Chimelong Ocean World (think Sea World) and Chimelong Spaceship (indoor park themed as a "spaceship") are the big competitors to position against. "Project Atlas" is the supposed codename for the new park (Atlas is the namesake for the Atlantic Ocean). So something with a nautical ship/ocean theme.
 

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