peter11435
Well-Known Member
The Treehouses are better off as DVC accommodations than they were as overflow CP housing for yearsTrue…the conversion was an Eisner green light…but the last phase and treehouse banishments were gravy on Bob
The Treehouses are better off as DVC accommodations than they were as overflow CP housing for yearsTrue…the conversion was an Eisner green light…but the last phase and treehouse banishments were gravy on Bob
The Polynesian Village longhouses are all steel structures. The original longhouses that were just refurbished are modular units built by US Steel that were stacked in place like the Contemporary Garden Wings. The DVC longhouses were added later and are more traditional street structures.I believe those long houses are all concrete, which can have an incredibly long life if taken care of. Hell, I live in a wetlands area and there is a 200+ year old house with stone foundation and brick footings that people still live in. I believe the longhouses can stay as long as Disney wants them to stay.
Parking is based on the number of rooms. Form doesn’t really matter.Not sure if it was addressed- but a tower probably needs a lot more parking spaces than the space allows for looking at the map
Interesting, thanks. I didn't know they built built the original resort as a modular like CR. It seems kind of unnecessary with the much shorter buildings but they were trying to build everything as quickly as possible. My understanding is that the later expansion was done with concrete and this is why they couldn't easily change the room size in the (eventual) DVC longhouses. I'll have to look for more information on the history once Tikiman gets his new site up (old one is hacked and redirects somewhere fishy).The Polynesian Village longhouses are all steel structures. The original longhouses that were just refurbished are modular units built by US Steel that were stacked in place like the Contemporary Garden Wings. The DVC longhouses were added later and are more traditional street structures.
Parking is based on the number of rooms. Form doesn’t really matter.
The Contemp and poly were a partnership with Disney and US Steel. They were testing modular construction concepts. Very Walt…”Epcot”Interesting, thanks. I didn't know they built built the original resort as a modular like CR. It seems kind of unnecessary with the much shorter buildings but they were trying to build everything as quickly as possible. My understanding is that the later expansion was done with concrete and this is why they couldn't easily change the room size in the (eventual) DVC longhouses. I'll have to look for more information on the history once Tikiman gets his new site up (old one is hacked and redirects somewhere fishy).
Deluxe Resort guests having dinner at a food truck. Now that is magical. Social media bloggers would have a field day with this.I don't think food offerings are guaranteed. Disney could suggest guests walk over to the GF. Park one or two food trucks
Two modular systems were used. The more famous one is the Contemporary tower where they slid the units into the larger frame. The Garden Wings and Polynesian Village units were stacked onto each other.Interesting, thanks. I didn't know they built built the original resort as a modular like CR. It seems kind of unnecessary with the much shorter buildings but they were trying to build everything as quickly as possible. My understanding is that the later expansion was done with concrete and this is why they couldn't easily change the room size in the (eventual) DVC longhouses. I'll have to look for more information on the history once Tikiman gets his new site up (old one is hacked and redirects somewhere fishy).
Deluxe Resort guests having dinner at a food truck. Now that is magical. Social media bloggers would have a field day with this.
…they’d Call it “magical” and ask for clicksDeluxe Resort guests having dinner at a food truck. Now that is magical. Social media bloggers would have a field day with this.
Never buy an apartment off the plan!Ah perfect. I just don't agree with the Hilton and Fairfield Inn Comps... it looks super residential to me. I'd buy a condo in it.
No one is allowed on the sand around SSL. At least at Grand Floridian.Well, food trucks are actually super trendy. More so a few years ago, but still very popular to this day.
A high end food truck would actually be fun to have around the resort - kind of beachy. They could park on the sand for a few hours. I have a few friends who went out of their way to hit up a few food trucks in Hawaii.
Well, food trucks are actually super trendy. More so a few years ago, but still very popular to this day.
A high end food truck would actually be fun to have around the resort - kind of beachy. They could park on the sand for a few hours. I have a few friends who went out of their way to hit up a few food trucks in Hawaii.
They have beach chairs, loungers, and beach games set up all over the beach by the feature pool there everyday.No one is allowed on the sand around SSL.. At least at Grand Floridian.
We were staying at CR and towards the end of our stay the food tent went up never used it ,but to Disney credit they gave us a $500 gift card we used at table service restaurants.Just think, a few years ago, during the reimagining of Caribbean Beach, guests ate in a party rental tent!
At Walt Disney World, guests find this acceptable and magical. Anywhere else in the world, I’m sure a guest would be demanding a refund or relocation.
View attachment 627554
tent went *Source: Disney Food Blog
Actually it was originally a J.W. Marriott. But, it still looks better than the proposed Atlantis monstrosity on the other side of Aulani !
You know…once…not that long ago…Just think, a few years ago, during the reimagining of Caribbean Beach, guests ate in a party rental tent!
At Walt Disney World, guests find this acceptable and magical. Anywhere else in the world, I’m sure a guest would be demanding a refund or relocation.
View attachment 627554
*Source: Disney Food Blog
It's own skyliner system to where?This is exactly my line of thought, poly has nostalgia, but how much longer can they keep these long houses (which are just rectangle buildings with fancy roofs tbh) maybe this is the what they envision poly to look like going forward? Same with CBR, I can see them continuing to chip away at the outrer building ans create a tower district in that corner of property, complete with its own skyliner system...
Hypothetically? You could run one fairly straight shot to Dak with some rigging. Springs would be more “problematic”It's own skyliner system to where?
Which seems like a really odd thing to locate at a single resort on Seven Seas, doesn't it?Hypothetically? You could run one fairly straight shot to Dak with some rigging. Springs would be more “problematic”
I think the topic might have rotated to caribbean?Which seems like a really odd thing to locate at a single resort on Seven Seas, doesn't it?
Then you have people coming from the other two by Monorail at that station to transfer from that resort creating more traffic and congestion across the whole monorail line and specifically at that stop.
Also, it would be a weird accommodation to a single park from a single resort like that, don't you think?
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