POTC Themed hotel??

Ijones88

Member
:wave: After seeing the POTC movie, which we thoroughly enjoyed, I started thinking how neat it would be for Disney to build a POTC themed hotel at WDW. Maybe on the 7 Seas Lagoon.

They could also do a hotel themed after the Haunted Mansion. The way Disney does things they could make the hotels really awsome. I bet people would be "dying" to stay there!!!:lol:

Anyway, what does everyone think??
 

kosherkid411

New Member
Darn it... My other post that I created vanished.
I'm gonna make this one simpler.

POTC Hotel is a great idea. My only problem is that they would be taking ele,ents from the Poly (Captain hook and Peter Pan stuff), Corandao Springs, and CBR to make it. I don't think one will ever be built.

The Haunted Mansion hotel sound great on paper, but it's goning to be hard to attrack families with small kids there. My younger cousins don't even like the ride. What makes you think that they are going to want to stay in a hotel based on the ride.

But as long as we're dreaming up hotels, I'd love to see a furtreist hotel or an asian inspired hotel. I would definatly stay at one of those.
 
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PurpleFigment

New Member
I would absolutely LOVE to stay in a Haunted Mansion-themed hotel, as long as my room wasn't haunted. Don't want any ghosts tickin' my toes -- or anything else -- in the middle of the night!

A POTC hotel would be awesome...so long as all the pirates look like Johnny Depp!
 
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WDW1971

Member
It would have to be called "Port Royal".

The "Haunted Resort" sounds like a great idea, but I just wonder how hard it would be to pull off. I mean, how would you know if the room is dirty or just well-decorated? :lol:
 
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Ijones88

Member
Original Poster
Originally posted by WDW1971
It would have to be called "Port Royal".

The "Haunted Resort" sounds like a great idea, but I just wonder how hard it would be to pull off. I mean, how would you know if the room is dirty or just well-decorated? :lol:
:lol:

Yeah, that's funny!! All the dust and spider webs would be a problem.....although Disney could save money by not having to have any maids or grounds keepers!!!
 
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kosherkid411

New Member
Originally posted by Ijones88
:lol:

Yeah, that's funny!! All the dust and spider webs would be a problem.....although Disney could save money by not having to have any maids or grounds keepers!!!

Not to get too far off topic...
I remember reading (I think in Birabaum's) that WDW has used enough dust and dirt in the Haunted Mansion to bury it. I think those maids might come in handy!
 
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Ijones88

Member
Original Poster
Or they could do a 20k themed hotel....hmmmm, they already have the subs to use for it. I think that would be a neat place.

Ok people, let's have more ideas!!! Maybe Disney will listen!:lol:
 
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Mission: SPACE

New Member
Originally posted by Ijones88
:lol:

Yeah, that's funny!! All the dust and spider webs would be a problem.....although Disney could save money by not having to have any maids or grounds keepers!!!


If you really wanna see this go through, just write a letter to Mikey Eisner and make sure to mention the fact that it would need no maids or grounds keepers... I'm sure he'll rush off to the Imagineers with the idea!!! :hammer:
 
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mortimermouse

New Member
The original plan for the Tower of Terror was to have an actual hotel element. Never worked tho. See below from Laughing Place. Sorry about the length.

"So what was going on here? Actually, Disney CEO Michael Eisner was having yet another one of his brainstorms. Ever since the inception of the Tower of Terror project (Back before the thrill ride had its overlay of Twilight Zone elements, back when the attraction was actually supposed to be more funny than frightening. Would you believe that one of the original titles for this Disney/MGM project was Hotel Mel? Why Mel? Because the ride was supposed to feature silly but scary sequences that had been dreamed up by "Young Frankenstein" director Mel Brooks. No kidding here, folks. Strange but true ... ), Michael had been toying with the idea of letting guests stay inside the horror themed hotel.

The way Eisner envisioned it, WDI could build 30 or more guest rooms inside the Tower of Terror show building. Where exactly? Right alongside the attraction's central elevator shaft. These rooms would then be tricked up with some mildly startling illusions (IE: Ghostly faces that would appear in their bathroom mirror, etc.). WDW visitors would then pay top dollar (something along the lines of $1000 - $1500 a night) to stay in this most exclusive of Disney resort hotels.

Unfortunately, the low number of hotel rooms that could conceivably folded into the plans for Disney/MGM's Tower of Terror ride didn't make the project seem financially feasible. Plus the Imagineers were never able to find workable solutions to even the most basic guest access / guest safety issues that were inherent in Michael's intriguing proposal. So plans for a group of guest accessible horror themed hotel rooms for WDW were reluctantly abandoned back in the early 1990s.

Flash forward now to the late 1990s -- when Disney/MGM's Twilight Zone Tower of Terror ride looks like a logical addition for Disney's California Adventure theme park. On a whim, the Imagineers decide to revisit Eisner's original idea (IE: combining the TOT attraction with guest accessible hotel space) and -- this time around -- a workable solution to the guest access / guest safety issues is allegedly discovered.

The way the DCA version of the Tower of Terror hotel / attraction combo supposedly solved the guest access problem goes something like this: In the Timon section of the old Disneyland parking lot, the Imagineers wanted to build this sprawling complex that would have looked like a grand old Hollywood hotel that had gone to seed. The section of this proposed hotel complex that was closest to the corner of Harbor & Katella was where the bulk of the resort's guest rooms, restaurants, shops, etc. would have been located.

The section of the Timon parking lot that was closest to DCA's Hollywood Pictures Backlot would have been home to the abandoned wing of the hotel, where something terrible happened many years ago. (You don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out what WDI wanted to do here. Just like in Florida, there would have been the lightening scarred tower, where guests would be invited to ride the service elevator up to the top of this long empty portion of the resort ...)

This particular layout scheme solved a lot of the problems that had been inherent in the original WDW version of the Twilight Zone Tower of Terror hotel / ride combo plan. Guest access, safety issues, etc. More importantly, this time around, Disney wouldn't just be limited to building 30 or more horror themed guest rooms in the hotel portion of the complex. Which finally made the project seem fiscally feasible.

Eisner was supposedly thrilled that his Tower of Terror hotel idea could finally become a reality. With his blessing, WDI went forward with mapping out some tentatively plans for this proposed new Disneyland Resort hotel / attraction combo complex ... Only to have their plans tripped up by DCA's dismal attendance levels during its few months of operations. Any and all ambitious plans for the Disneyland Resort are now officially on hold 'til Mouse House managers get California Adventure back on track.

So just how close did this plan actually come to being a reality? Well, it's worth noting that -- during all the years that WDI continually reworked its site plan for the California Adventure theme park -- the Imagineers NEVER proposed any rides, shows and attractions for the Timon Parking lot space. Right from the get-go, this area was designated for DCA "Future Expansion." When pressed for details about this particular parcel, all the Imagineers would say is that this area is "being set aside for something very special."

Something very special like Disney's first ever hotel / ride combo? Perhaps ...

Of course, given the projected cost of the Twilight Zone Tower of Terror hotel / ride complex, it's easy to understand why Disney held off on construction of this particular piece of the newly expanded Disneyland Resort 'til DCA's Phase II. Which meant that -- if all had gone according to plan -- California Adventure visitors would have probably been able to "drop in" at this most unusual hotel starting in 2004 / 2005.

(Alas, all has not gone according to plan with California Adventure. Disney executives -- who have supposedly turned skittish in the wake of DCA's low attendance levels during the park's first few months of operation -- have now allegedly backed away from the ambitious Twilight Zone Tower of Terror hotel / ride combo plan. The latest news about Disneyland's old Timon parking area is that this parcel is now reportedly being considered for an Anaheim version of WDW's All Star Resort hotel. "
 
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WDWFREAK53

Well-Known Member
Originally posted by kosherkid411

But as long as we're dreaming up hotels, I'd love to see a furtreist hotel or an asian inspired hotel. I would definatly stay at one of those.

Furtreist??? is that some Tropicana hotel or something?
 
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kosherkid411

New Member
Originally posted by WDWFREAK53
Furtreist??? is that some Tropicana hotel or something?

Sorry about that. My spelling skills are bad and my typing skills are worse. Mix them together and that's what you get.

I would like to see FUTUREISTIC hotel. Nothing based on anything specific, but things like motion sensors sliding doors, space blankets for comfortors and maybe even computers/laptops in each room.
 
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Ijones88

Member
Original Poster
Originally posted by kosherkid411
Sorry about that. My spelling skills are bad and my typing skills are worse. Mix them together and that's what you get.

I would like to see FUTUREISTIC hotel. Nothing based on anything specific, but things like motion sensors sliding doors, space blankets for comfortors and maybe even computers/laptops in each room.

Sounds like an idea that I have had since I was a little kid, a full size Starship from Star Trek for a hotel like in Las Vegas or something....I actually thought Universal could do it but I realized the size of the Enterprise is like a 1000 feet or yards something like that, correct me if im wrong, but that would be COOL!!! Beam me up Scotty!!
 
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