Sir_Cliff
Well-Known Member
That is quite a good point!I read your original comment such that you were saying that space ships are limited in size. I realize that water based ships have many limitations, space based ships, not so much. I think that the increase in size is due to the design software that the naval architects now have that can model the stability of the ship better. Although I wouldn't want to be on one of those behemoths if it takes a 70' rouge wave on the side.
As a person very interested in Science fiction, there is no reason why the cabins would have to be so small.
It comes down to either:
1. The designers didn't understand the practical reasons why water ships are designed like they are vs space ships on size limitations. They should have done their research. Where is Rohde when you need him?
2. Disney wanted to build something as cheap as possible. All that space theming costs money. Much more that 4 walls of drywall and paint in a regular hotel room.
or more likely both.
I think we've all kind of tacitly accepted that the rooms are going to be somewhat tight because, well, it's supposed to be like a cruise in space and cruise ship rooms are small.
The reality is, though, that none of the constraints that lead to cruise ship rooms being small apply in this case and who the hell knows how big a normal room on a starcruiser would be? No-one, because it's a made-up concept largely invented for this hotel!
So, they really could have made the rooms as large as they wanted but seemed to embrace cruise-size proportions to reduce cost. The other thing that is surprisingly small even within the context of a small room is the "window" into space.