Hotels for my proposed Disney theme park resort (REVISED)

KentB3

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
I made a few revisions to my list of hotels for my proposed Disney theme park resort as of opening day-- which will consist of four hotels plus a campground. Three of these hotels run in the Deluxe to Moderate price range ($133+ per night), while the 4th is a Value-priced resort ($77-$124 per night). These hotels are listed in order from most expensive/luxurious to least. Here is what I have so far:

Disneyland Hotel: This is the crown jewel of the hotels in my proposed Disney theme park resort. The architecture is very much like that of the Grand Floridian, but the layout is more like that of Disneyland's Grand Californian, with all rooms in one building and six floors instead the Grand Floridian's and the Grand Californian's (I think) five. The Disneyland Hotel also includes the Neverland Pool, based on the Disney animated movie Peter Pan (1953) -- similar to the pool at the Disneyland (Anaheim) Hotel, but larger to accomodate more guests. There are 600 rooms inside the Disneyland Hotel, which overlooks the Magic Kingdom theme park.

Disney's Hollywood Hotel: This hotel overlooks the Disney Studios theme park, and has a Hollywood theme to it, with somewhat of a Disney focus. The Hollywood Hotel is quite similar to the Hollywood Hotel in the soon-to-open Hong Kong theme park, but may include a few differences as well. There are 502 rooms inside Disney's Hollywood Hotel, the same number as Disneyland's Paradise Pier Hotel.

Disney's Contemporary Resort: Overlooking the Discoveryland side of the Magic Kingdom, the Contemporary Resort is similar to its WDW counterpart, but with numerous differences as well. In addition to many different shops and restaurants, the conference rooms on the 3rd floor of WDW's Contemprary Resort will be inside the convention center building, since it would be a better location, I think. The convention center at WDW's Contemporary was built in 1991, 20 years after the hotel opened, with explains why the conference rooms are in the tower. Also, all rooms are inside the tower, as no exterior wings have been built, at least not yet! :animwink:

Here is the floor arrangement for this hotel:

Floor 1: Lobby/Food
Floor 2 & 3: Shops & Restaurants (WDW's Contemporary has this on floors 2 & 4, with the conference rooms on floor 3)
Floor 4: Guest Rooms & Monorail Station
Floor 5-12, 14: Guest Rooms
Floor 15: Not sure. WDW's has California Grill, but I will probably have something different. I am seriously considering a new, up-to-date version of Top of the World for the top floor, it this would work today!

On the 3rd floor, Chef Mickey's offers character dining every day at Breakfast and Dinner. Characters include Mickey, Minnie, Donald (at Dinner), Goofy, Pluto (at Breakfast), Chip and Dale.

Despite the fact that WDW has the Contemporary, I chose this since I always found the Contemporary to be a facinating building to look at, especially with the monorail going right though the building! There are 441 rooms inside the Contemporary; which is 48 more rooms than WDW's has inside its tower, due to the relocation and better placement of the conference rooms!

Disney's All-Stars Resort: Disney's All-Stars is similar to All-Star Movies at WDW, but focusing on the characters instead of their movies. This is our Value resort, with rooms spanning 320 square feet (as opposed to ASM's 260 square foot rooms). The All-Stars is broken up into 8 buildings, with 104 rooms in each building (shaped like a straight rectangle the same legth as WDW's All-Stars and Pop Century's inns, but missing the back wing which from WDW's inns, which give WDW's their "T" shape) on three floors, with two buildings per theme. Here is what I have for Disney's All-Stars:

1.) 101 Dalmations: even though this is the film's title, the 101 Dalmations are still the movie's main characters!
2.) Buzz & Woody's: This is the Toy Story-themed area, but the name was changed for reasons mentioned above.
3.) House of Mouse: This features the "Big 5" (Mickey, Minnie, Donald, Goofy, and Pluto); along with their frequent costars (Daisy, Scrooge McDuck, Huey, Dewey, Louie, Chip & Dale, etc.). The House of Mouse also features the Duck Pond Pool, which includes a centerpiece of Donald and other duck costars shooting water pistols into the pool, much like the Calypso Pool's centerpiece at WDW's All-Star Music! There is also a small, shallower kiddie pool next to the main one. The pool sits in the middle of the cluster of motel buildings, with the main building at one end, and room for expansion at the other end of the complex.

4.) Pooh Corner: which features Winnie the Pooh, Tigger, Piglet, Eeyore, et. al.

Disney's All-Stars has a total of 832 rooms, with room for building more inns whenever the time comes for expansion. The All-Stars Hall is the main building; which houses the offices, food court, snack bar, and lounge/bar.

Disneyland Campground: Similar to Fort Wilderness at WDW, Disneyland Campground consists of 207 campsites, along with 108 cabins. This gives us a total of 315 "rooms", for lack of a better term!


The 4 hotels and the campground give us a Grand Total of 2,690 rooms/cabins/campsites combined; slightly more rooms than Disneyland's hotels in Anaheim, CA, but only about 1/12 the 30,000 rooms/cabins/campsites WDW offers within its numerous resorts! Nevertheless, I think what I came up with for a new Disney theme park resort is sufficient. If anyone has questions, comments, and/or suggestions, please feel free to post! :)
 

KentB3

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
I just made a few more revisions to my list of hotels for my proposed Disney theme park resort as of opening day. For one thing, I discovered upon reading a map of WDW's Contemporary on AllEarsNet.com, access to the convention center there comes from the 2nd floor and was created out of former conference room space (all of my conference rooms here are in the convention center building, like the Grand Flordian's). Since I obviously didn't have a conference room floor since the convention center in my Contempary was build at the same time as the hotel (instead of 20 years later like WDW's), I would be losing shop/restaurant/atheltic club space on the 2nd floor. Therefore, I lengthened the Contemporary 1 window pane length longer; giving mine 13 window lengths as opposed to WDW's 12-- which is about the most I could lengthen the Contemporary tower without distorting the shape of the building.

Also, I noticed the All-Stars buildings (mine) would look empty on the back with a blank wall on the back behind the character sculptures in the middle of the inns. While reading both the official and unofficial guides to WDW last night when I was doing some trip-planning, I noticed something I never could've imagined. Even though WDW's All-Star (Music, Movies, and Sports) and Pop Century's motel room buildings are the exact same shape, Pop Century's inns are smaller; All-Star M/M/S have 192 rooms per building (5,760 in 30 buildings), while Pop Century's have only 144 (2,880 in 20 buildings). In addition, both AS and PC have 260 sq. ft. rooms, so Pop Century's Inn definitely are shorter in length.

As for adding the extra rooms, I also took into account the fact that in addition to its own hotels, Disneyland Resort (Anaheim) has over 20 hotels/motels just across the street from the park(s) on Harbor Blvd. alone. I certainly planned NOT to have any busy streets like this directly adjacent to my theme parks!

Once again, my Disney theme park resort has four hotels plus a campground. Three of these hotels run in the Deluxe to Moderate price range ($133+ per night), while the 4th is a Value-priced resort ($77-$124 per night). These hotels are listed in order from most expensive/luxurious to least. Here is what I have so far:

Disneyland Hotel: This is the crown jewel of the hotels in my proposed Disney theme park resort. The architecture is very much like that of the Grand Floridian, but the layout is more like that of Disneyland's Grand Californian, with all rooms in one building and six floors instead the Grand Floridian's and the Grand Californian's (I think) five. The Disneyland Hotel also includes the Neverland Pool, based on the Disney animated movie Peter Pan (1953) -- similar to the pool at the Disneyland (Anaheim) Hotel, but larger to accomodate more guests. There are 600 rooms inside the Disneyland Hotel, which overlooks the Magic Kingdom theme park.

Disney's Hollywood Hotel: This hotel overlooks the Disney Studios theme park, and has a Hollywood theme to it, with somewhat of a Disney focus. The Hollywood Hotel is quite similar to the Hollywood Hotel in the soon-to-open Hong Kong theme park, especially with it's Art Deco/Hollywood themed architecture but may include a few differences as well. There are 502 rooms inside Disney's Hollywood Hotel, the same number as Disneyland's Paradise Pier Hotel.

Here is a pic of Hong Kong's Hollywood Hotel, which I was going to incoporate
the arcitectural feaures of into mine, just with a somewhat different building layout!: http://hongkongdisneyland.com/eng/preview/diary/holhotel_pop06.html


Disney's Contemporary Resort: Overlooking the Discoveryland side of the Magic Kingdom, the Contemporary Resort is similar to its WDW counterpart, but with numerous differences as well. In addition to many different shops and restaurants, the conference rooms on the 3rd floor of WDW's Contemprary Resort will be inside the convention center building, since it would be a better location, I think. The convention center at WDW's Contemporary was built in 1991, 20 years after the hotel opened, with explains why the conference rooms are in the tower. Also, all rooms are inside the tower, as no exterior wings have been built, at least not yet!

Also, the tower building will be widened one window-pane length (with 2 hotel rooms behind each pane), giving mine 13 window-pane lengths instead of WDW's 12; which is also equal to the number of floors (since there is no floor 13 and the 15th is completely separate from the rest of the building's shape and structure). This was done to create access to the Convention Center without taking retail space from the 2nd floor.

Here is the floor arrangement for this hotel:

Floor 1: Lobby/Food
Floor 2: Shops, Restaurants, Health/Atheltic Club, plus access to the Convention Center
Floor 3: Shops & Restaurants (WDW's Contemporary has this on floors 4, with the conference rooms on floor 3)
Floor 4: Guest Rooms & Monorail Station
Floor 5-12, 14: Guest Rooms
Floor 15: Not sure. WDW's has California Grill, but I will probably have something different. I am seriously considering a new, up-to-date version of Top of the World for the top floor, it this would work today!

On the 3rd floor, Chef Mickey's offers character dining every day at Breakfast and Dinner. Characters include Mickey, Minnie, Donald (at Dinner), Goofy, Pluto (at Breakfast), Chip and Dale.

Despite the fact that WDW has the Contemporary, I chose this since I always found the Contemporary to be a facinating building to look at, especially with the monorail going right though the building! There are 476 rooms inside the Contemporary; which is 83 more rooms than WDW's has inside its tower, due to the (slight) extra width and the relocation and better placement of the conference rooms!

Disney's All-Stars Resort: Disney's All-Stars is similar to All-Star Movies at WDW, but focusing on the characters instead of their movies. This is our Value resort, with rooms spanning 320 square feet (as opposed to ASM's 260 square foot rooms). The All-Stars is broken up into 8 buildings, with 126 rooms in each "T shaped" building (like WDW's All-Stars and Pop Century's inns) on three floors, with two buildings per theme. The guest room buildings are a little longer than Pop Century's, but shorter than WDW's All-Star inns. Here is what I have for Disney's All-Stars:

1.) 101 Dalmations: even though this is the film's title, the 101 Dalmations are still the movie's main characters!
2.) Buzz & Woody's: This is the Toy Story-themed area, but the name was changed for reasons mentioned above.
3.) House of Mouse: This features the "Big 5" (Mickey, Minnie, Donald, Goofy, and Pluto); along with their frequent costars (Daisy, Scrooge McDuck, Huey, Dewey, Louie, Chip & Dale, etc.). The House of Mouse also features the Duck Pond Pool, which includes a centerpiece of Donald and other duck costars shooting water pistols into the pool, much like the Calypso Pool's centerpiece at WDW's All-Star Music! There is also a small, shallower kiddie pool next to the main one. The pool sits in the middle of the cluster of motel buildings, with the main building at one end, and room for expansion at the other end of the complex.

4.) Pooh Corner: which features Winnie the Pooh, Tigger, Piglet, Eeyore, et. al.

Disney's All-Stars has a total of 1,008 rooms (slightly over half the number as each of WDW's 3 All-Star resorts), with room for building more inns whenever the time comes for expansion! The All-Stars Hall is the main building; which houses the offices, food court, snack bar, and lounge/bar.

Disneyland Campground: Similar to Fort Wilderness at WDW, Disneyland Campground consists of 207 campsites, along with 108 cabins. This gives us a total of 315 "rooms", for lack of a better term!


The 4 hotels and the campground give us a Grand Total of 2,901 rooms/cabins/campsites combined; a bit more rooms than Disneyland's hotels in Anaheim, CA, but only about 1/10-1/11 the 30,000 rooms/cabins/campsites WDW offers within its numerous resorts! Nevertheless, I think what I came up with for a new Disney theme park resort is sufficient. If anyone has questions, comments, and/or suggestions, please feel free to post! :)
 

stitchcastle

Well-Known Member
I have a suggestion for a hotel for your DisneySea park in case you use American Waterfront as one of its ports...it's the Grand New Yorker or the Manhattan Hotel and would provide a good backdrop to American Waterfront
 

KentB3

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
stitchcastle said:
I have a suggestion for a hotel for your DisneySea park in case you use American Waterfront as one of its ports...it's the Grand New Yorker or the Manhattan Hotel and would provide a good backdrop to American Waterfront

Actually, I was in fact considering the Venitian (originally planned for WDW, but never built) for my DisneySea park. However, the New Yorker/Manhattan Hotel is not a bad idea either, and I'll consider that one as well! :animwink:
 

stitchcastle

Well-Known Member
Actually, I was in fact considering the Venitian (originally planned for WDW, but never built) for my DisneySea park. However, the New Yorker/Manhattan Hotel is not a bad idea either, and I'll consider that one as well!

Thanks, I was also thinking maybe adding in a Coney Island themed section of American Waterfront, sort of like Paradise Pier, as an homage to the legendary Coney Island.....ok that's enough meddling :D
 

KentB3

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
stitchcastle said:
Thanks, I was also thinking maybe adding in a Coney Island themed section of American Waterfront, sort of like Paradise Pier, as an homage to the legendary Coney Island.....ok that's enough meddling :D

I was thinking about including a Paradise Pier-like area as well. In fact, this was planned for the proposed (but never built, at least not yet!) Long Beach DisneySea theme park. Here are a couple of weblinks about the Long Beach DisneySea from Jim Hill.com.

http://www.jimhillmedia.com/mb/articles/showarticle.php?ID=1295
http://www.jimhillmedia.com/mb/articles/showarticle.php?ID=1299

In the 1st link, a drawing of the land similar to Paradise Pier can been seen, complete with an almost exact duplicate of the Sun Wheel! :animwink:

Early on when planning my proposed park, I considered an area similar to Paradise Pier in a water park, but that didn't work out at all! If/when I should use a Paradise Pier-like land, I will definitely add it to my DisneySea park.
 

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