Disney Dawg88
Active Member
The interactive queue? No. The other changes? Yes.....
Do you have a link to the other changes? Thanks!
The interactive queue? No. The other changes? Yes.....
Do you have a link to the other changes? Thanks!
Maybe they should theme it to the Lost Boys singing "Following the Leader" since you are in a line after all. That way, everyone will keep moving forward! :ROFLOL:
the bad thing is after it is completed there will be members who will tear it apart and and moan how it doesn't keep the same feeling of the original ride and how the themeing just destroys the meaning of the attraction.![]()
That depends on how it is all done. If the ride is not changed and the interactive elements reference Neverland then I will be one complaining that the queue no longer follows the attraction's story of going to and returning from Neverland.The bad thing is after it is completed there will be members who will tear it apart and and moan how it doesn't keep the same feeling of the original ride and how the themeing just destroys the meaning of the attraction.![]()
All of this pretty much sums up the hersay you think you know about ADA compliance.
'something' 'ADA folks' airquotes and all.
Disney would likely be more concerned with reducing the need to have separate handicap accessible queues then worrying about being compliant. Being compliant is easy with accommodations. A separate entrance, requiring transfers - done. Where Disney goes above and beyond is where they try to accomodate handicapped while minimizing the impact on the show for everyone.
There is no need to worry about ADA grandfathering here except in the queue itself - and that's simply design decisions.
I'm sorry, but that is simply incorrect. And I'm not sure what I did to deserve the attitude, but that's OK. I'm simply sharing the facts of the situation.
I have done a good deal of research on this attraction and it's compliance in particular. You are absolutely correct, Disney is rather incredible in their accommodations to those that would otherwise be unable to ride in most circumstances (though, to be fair, quite a bit of what they do is mandated by law). My post was not criticizing Disney, though it would be nice if they could bring the ride into full compliance.
The queue is not the problem - there is a separate entrance for disabled guests. Disney does not have to make all queues accessible if they provide an alternate entrance, as they do on Pan.
The problem is the ride system itself. It is not meant to be stopped. In order to be accessible, they need to actually stop for boarding. This is where compliance comes in.
The only way for someone who cannot walk to get on Pan right now is to have someone physically pick the person up, and run along side the ship while it's moving and slip them in. Depending on the size of the person and how strong the guests with them are, this can range from easy, to downright impossible. However, even when it does work, it still technically is not accessible (and is pretty dangerous which is why some CM's frown on it).
They can slightly slow it, but they cannot stop it without a Full E-Stop. Now, I haven't seen or heard this done in several years, so I do not know if it is still valid, but at one time an E-stop required that Reedy Creek fire department was called and everyone was evacuated from the ride as it supposedly is a safety hazard to restart the ride while guests are suspended in vehicles.
They have not had to update the attraction ride system because it is grandfathered under the ADA laws. As I specified in my previous posting, it would depend on lawyers and the interpretation of the law if the queue was considered part of the ride structure or not. Those types of details depend on whom you talk to, and whomever is making the judgement.
Basically, to bring it compliant would require a rebuild of the entire ride system so it was able to be safely stopped and started while the attraction was in operation without having to E-stop.
As it seems they already have permits for this, apparently the queue is not considered part of the ride building for whatever reason.
I have a disabled member of my family that is no longer able to ride (she is almost 20 years old now, we simply cannot pick her up and carry her on in the time frame allotted by the non-stopping vehicles like we used to), of course I do hope that someday this ride (and TTA) is brought into compliance.
Like we discussed earlier in the thread, I have a feeling that once FLE is in place and Mermaid/Snow White are open, we'll see Pan go down for a rebuild, not only to address the issue of the non-compliant ride system, but also the outdated technology compared to the Pan's in other parks. Ours is the oldest at this point, as it's never been substantially updated (even Disneyland's version added fiber optics, for example, and the Paris version blows us out of the water). It would be wonderful to see this, as it is slightly ironic that the ride that let's you fly you have to be able to walk to experience.
They have not had to update the attraction ride system because it is grandfathered under the ADA laws
As I specified in my previous posting, it would depend on lawyers and the interpretation of the law if the queue was considered part of the ride structure or not. Those types of details depend on whom you talk to, and whomever is making the judgement.
Basically, to bring it compliant would require a rebuild of the entire ride system so it was able to be safely stopped and started while the attraction was in operation without having to E-stop.
To me a better solution to this would be a seperate load/unload area like Toy Story Midway Mania. There would have to be some type of gap in the spacing of the flying ships so that the accessible ones could be intgrated into the ride. The ADA compliant ships could possibly be custom made so that even chairs could roll into them as well. I think this is a better solution than re-imagineering the entire ride system. Otherwise, great post and great insight.
While true it pre-dates the compliance requirements - not every experience needs to be compliant.
That's because there is no such thing as 'the ADA folks'. ADA compliance is dictated by one person - a judge. There is no enforcement by the fed or state - it's purely something that must be settled by suing and decided by a judge. The law defines the intent, and subsequent agencies have defined standards - but only a judge in a lawsuit can truely label you compliant or not.
Then that right there is sufficient to say they don't need to make the ride accessible. The law protects businesses from having to make impractical or undue burden. The very fact you believe it would take so much to make it compliant - is exactly why Disney could argue why they don't have to make it compliant.
wait is it confirmed that Peter Pan is getting an interactive queue? Instead of an interactive queue how about updating and upgrading the ride. Disneyland's FL dark rides got major updates in the 80s and have been getting several new effects recently while WDW's rides are still stuck in the 70s.
Just another example of the suits in cali neglecting WDW.
Why should they when TDO will not take care of what they already have.
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