TP2000
Well-Known Member
Wow if they do that we’d actually have an extra ~20 acres of potential park space than if we got a hypothetical park 3 at Toy Story. They still don’t know what to do with that side of dtd either so that’s no loss
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As for DTD, they've got to realize that retail is not the wave of the future. To get people out of their homes and away from their 70 inch 4K screens, they've got to offer things that can't be delivered via Amazon or Uber Eats or streamed via the TV. That means entertainment and upscale dining experiences.
They've purposely allowed the DTD footprint to shrink, and that was before Covid. Now? The 1990's footprint of DTD makes even less sense than it did in 2018. I imagine they are facing the same basic realization with the huge amount of retail space at Disney Springs too, but we'll keep this to Anaheim.
If you slice off the abandoned end of DTD (ESPNZone, Rainforest Cafe and AMC Megatheater) you get a current DTD footprint that makes a lot more sense for the 2020's and beyond than the original circa 1997 footprint does. They don't need it, so cut it off and turn it into theme park.
That hypothesis doesn't explain the new DVC Tower they are building at the Disneyland Hotel though. And there will still likely be a rebuilt Disneyland Hotel as an island on that space a decade from now, as the secondary "premium" hotel offering for DLR.
But the silver lining of the Colglazier Blowup with Anaheim, followed quickly by the 14 month long Covid closure and disaster, gives them an opportunity to really rethink how they're going to use that big superblock of property for the next 50 years.
What made sense just a few short years ago has been destroyed culturally and societally now. Disneyland Forward is, luckily for whomever branded it that way, the way forward for them through the next 50 years.
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