horaceluke
Member
I couldn’t agree more. MK needs 5 more quality-but-not headliner attractions. Solid Ds. Maybe a C or 2
What would you consider a d ticket nowadays?
I couldn’t agree more. MK needs 5 more quality-but-not headliner attractions. Solid Ds. Maybe a C or 2
Florida was going to get Cars Land ?! That's awesome! I hope we can still get it in the future.
We live in our little Disney nerd bubble in here where we hear a lot of the goings-on well before they're announced, which also makes things feel like they take forever to come to fruition.
I'm constantly in awe/amazement when on my bi-yearly visit to WDW I still hear many a conversation where people are talking about it being their first visit or have zero clue what is going on in the parks. It's great to know there are so many first timers still going, but it also brings me back into reality that our little micro-disney-verse we live in here on the boards is not, and never will be, the general consensus of the normal park-goer.
From the time Ratatouille (not a new ride) was announced by Disney and it opens, it will have been almost 3 years. From the time Guardians (new ride) was announced by Disney and it opens, it will have been 3.5-4 years. From the time Tron (not a new ride) was announced by Disney and when it opens, it will have been 3.5-4 years. And so on.
Folks here have more knowledge of what's going on. But that's not why it seems like things take forever to come to fruition. Watching the Imagineering Story I was floored by how quickly Disney used to accomplish things. Entire parks would be announced and completed in less time than it takes them to build one ride now.
Of relatively recent attractions, I think Mermaid's a D, Frozen Ever After, in scope so is Smuggler's Run. I'd call Enchanted Tales with Belle a C, along with Laugh Floor and the Nemo Seas ride. My opinions, of course.What would you consider a d ticket nowadays?
Not OP, but my list of Solid D tickets would be:What would you consider a d ticket nowadays?
Tron costs almost twice as much as the original Disneyland adjusted. 17 million vs 300 million plus per some sources. So very apples and oranges. If my numbers are off anyone can feel free to correct them.
Animal Kingdom cost (what) $1.5 billion adjusted and was constructed in less time than Tron. Galaxy's Edge cost a billion (more?) and just finished in the same apparent timeframe as Tron (but longer than AK). HK Disney cost more than AK or GE and was even faster. Take your pick.
It's much, much easier to build on open land when you can run equipment 24 hours a day than it is to build within an already existing (and open to the public) park.From the time Ratatouille (not a new ride) was announced by Disney and it opens, it will have been almost 3 years. From the time Guardians (new ride) was announced by Disney and it opens, it will have been 3.5-4 years. From the time Tron (not a new ride) was announced by Disney and when it opens, it will have been 3.5-4 years. And so on.
Folks here have more knowledge of what's going on. But that's not why it seems like things take forever to come to fruition. Watching the Imagineering Story I was floored by how quickly Disney used to accomplish things. Entire parks would be announced and completed in less time than it takes them to build one ride now.
That’s a great point...deliveries, dust control, etc. are much more of a concern around any construction site today, as compared to years prior. I dont even have to tell you about the guest experience either...scrims, fencing, etc.It's much, much easier to build on open land when you can run equipment 24 hours a day than it is to build within an already existing (and open to the public) park.
It's much, much easier to build on open land when you can run equipment 24 hours a day than it is to build within an already existing (and open to the public) park.
It's much, much easier to build on open land when you can run equipment 24 hours a day than it is to build within an already existing (and open to the public) park.
No one doubts they could build Tron faster. But when the sum of all capital investments over the last decade at WDW is considered, it becomes clear why they would want the funds allocated across many quarters.
USF Transformers: Hold my beerconstruction rules may also be different in a place like Hong Kong. in Florida with the reedy creek powers Disney should be ab to do things faster but it obviously pays them not to for some reason
I'm sure there are limitations with having guests around. I wouldn't expect them to work 24 hrs a day, but I can't imagine that's what they were doing on previous projects either. Regardless, they don't limit construction to only when the parks are closed. And we're still talking about something muuuuuuch smaller than an entire park. Even just compared to Galaxy's Edge, Tron and Guardians are slow.
Oh, sure. They obviously think it's more cost-effective to do it this way. My examples were in response to the idea that Disney seems slow because we follow them closely. I think Disney is actually slow.
It didn't use to take as long.Disney quality takes time. Ideally.
If it was “within” then it should take slightly longer. TRON and Rat are not within.It's much, much easier to build on open land when you can run equipment 24 hours a day than it is to build within an already existing (and open to the public) park.
It didn't use to take as long.
And was markedly higher quality.
Meet me in Orlando in the fall and let’s do it together.I'm telling you, someone should do a two hour webcast with you and someone with the opposite opinion. Gold.
Meet me in Orlando in the fall and let’s do it together.
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