TP2000
Well-Known Member
I LOVE the arguments on this topic, as they always crack me up!:ROFLOL:
"You can't close a 40 year old attraction for maintenance every year! It will ruin someones vacation!" HA! Cause the embarassing condition the Mansion was in before the first rehab in years, and the equally embarassing condition other old Magic Kingdom attractions are still in like Peter Pan, Jungle Cruise, Space Mountain, Country Bears, etc., etc. is certainly better than routine maintenance and upkeep?
"The attraction would be closed for half the year with refurbs and Holiday versions!" Um, no. They have both the install and removal rehabs down to a 12 to 17 day period. This year, in September, the attraction will be closed for an additional week because they are replacing the old slurry pavement around the New Orleans Square area with themed pavement. (This is one of the last areas of slurry left in Disneyland and soon to be gone, although it's still widely in use in WDW for some reason.) So this September the Mansion will be closed for one extra week, but only due to the fact that the pavement all around the attraction is being replaced.
The average time that the Mansion is not available in its 1969 original version is four months each year. Two weeks of install, two weeks of removal, three months of daily operation as Haunted Mansion Holiday. The same timetable is used for Small World Holiday, except it has about a month less of Holiday operation as it's only running from mid November through early January. And the two week install/removal rehabs come at some of the slowest weeks of the year in September and January.
I'm not a Tim Burton fan personally, and from the thirty minutes or so I've seen of Nightmare Before Christmas I found it to be a bit creepy and weird. But I LOVE the Holiday version of Haunted Mansion. It's just such a fun, unique thing to do. I also really enjoyed the Tokyo version of Haunted Mansion Holiday, and it was just as well done as the Anaheim version.
Interestingly, the Tokyo Haunted Mansion facility is almost an exact duplicate of the Florida version. So the other random argument sometimes used that "Florida's version is different from Anaheim and would be too hard to have the Holiday show installed" lost its validity once Tokyo opened Haunted Mansion Holiday a couple of years ago.
"You can't close a 40 year old attraction for maintenance every year! It will ruin someones vacation!" HA! Cause the embarassing condition the Mansion was in before the first rehab in years, and the equally embarassing condition other old Magic Kingdom attractions are still in like Peter Pan, Jungle Cruise, Space Mountain, Country Bears, etc., etc. is certainly better than routine maintenance and upkeep?
"The attraction would be closed for half the year with refurbs and Holiday versions!" Um, no. They have both the install and removal rehabs down to a 12 to 17 day period. This year, in September, the attraction will be closed for an additional week because they are replacing the old slurry pavement around the New Orleans Square area with themed pavement. (This is one of the last areas of slurry left in Disneyland and soon to be gone, although it's still widely in use in WDW for some reason.) So this September the Mansion will be closed for one extra week, but only due to the fact that the pavement all around the attraction is being replaced.
The average time that the Mansion is not available in its 1969 original version is four months each year. Two weeks of install, two weeks of removal, three months of daily operation as Haunted Mansion Holiday. The same timetable is used for Small World Holiday, except it has about a month less of Holiday operation as it's only running from mid November through early January. And the two week install/removal rehabs come at some of the slowest weeks of the year in September and January.
I'm not a Tim Burton fan personally, and from the thirty minutes or so I've seen of Nightmare Before Christmas I found it to be a bit creepy and weird. But I LOVE the Holiday version of Haunted Mansion. It's just such a fun, unique thing to do. I also really enjoyed the Tokyo version of Haunted Mansion Holiday, and it was just as well done as the Anaheim version.
Interestingly, the Tokyo Haunted Mansion facility is almost an exact duplicate of the Florida version. So the other random argument sometimes used that "Florida's version is different from Anaheim and would be too hard to have the Holiday show installed" lost its validity once Tokyo opened Haunted Mansion Holiday a couple of years ago.