• The new WDWMAGIC iOS app is here!
    Stay up to date with the latest Disney news, photos, and discussions right from your iPhone. The app is free to download and gives you quick access to news articles, forums, photo galleries, park hours, weather and Lightning Lane pricing. Learn More
  • Welcome to the WDWMAGIC.COM Forums!
    Please take a look around, and feel free to sign up and join the community.

Treehouse Villas to be rebuilt

mkt

When a paradise is lost go straight to Disney™
Premium Member
Original Poster
From the Orlando Sentinel

Hidden among the trees in an obscure part of Walt Disney World, one of Disney's more unusual and largely forgotten housing options is getting new life.

The giant resort intends to tear down and replace Disney's Treehouse Villas, a community of 60 two-story housing units that have been used at various times as for-rent lodging, Disney Institute guest housing, and international student-worker housing.

The three-bedroom villas -- essentially octagonal town houses on pedestals, looking a little like treehouses -- are scattered throughout a forested back road between a Disney World golf course and a canal, where they have aged, sometimes not well, for 33 years.

While a few of them are in plain view to golfers on the Lake Buena Vista Golf Course and to resort guests who take a ferry-boat ride up the canal, they are well out of sight for the vast portion of the 100,000 or more people who occupy Disney World on any given day.

They're the kind of place, said independent Disney World author and podcaster Lou Mongello, that only "Disney geeks like us" talk about. Mongello, who lives in New Jersey has even stayed in them a couple of times, though he did so decades ago.

"The thing I remember about the villas, I liked so much, is you didn't feel like you were in Florida. You didn't feel like you were in Walt Disney World. It felt like you were remote and distant from Orlando and the theme parks and the hustle and bustle," said Mongello, author of the two-volume The Walt Disney World Trivia Book. "It was lush and so green. Very lush."

And a little bit hush-hush.

Disney officials haven't made much of the villas for years, and even now they aren't willing to discuss their plans in any detail. The company sought and received permission from the South Florida Water Management District recently to tear down the villas and replace them. Disney World spokeswoman Andrea Finger said at least some of the new units would be available for use by resort visitors -- the first time any of the Treehouse Villas have been open to the public in several years.

She would not discuss whether the new Treehouse Villas would be rented as lodging, sold as Disney Vacation Club time shares, or both.

"We are bringing them back as a popular option for our guests," she said. "The unique location has provided a tranquil and more secluded environment that our guests have enjoyed since the mid-'70s."

Disney first opened the villas in 1975. Strung along a cul-de-sac road more than a quarter-mile long off Disney Vacation Club Way, the complex has its own pool and a small clubhouse. The villas were renovated in 1987 and then converted to housing in 1996 for the short-lived Disney Institute; at least some were sometimes made available for regular park visitors until 2002.

By then they were showing their age.

According to Ray Maxwell, district administrator for the Reedy Creek Improvement District, most or all of the Treehouse Villas had been shuttered by the time Hurricane Charley blasted through Central Florida on Aug. 13, 2004, wrecking the villas and the surrounding woods. The damage was such that there was talk that Charley might have spawned a small tornado into the area, he said.

"A lot of trees blew down, and there was a lot of damage to the units," Maxwell said. "They [Disney officials] took them out of service. Before they could do anything, the units needed to be rehabbed."

In 2005, at least some of the units were reopened as housing for international students working at Disney World, and were used as such until just a few weeks ago, Finger said.

The sign out front at the gate warns, "Cast Members Only."

Much of the complex was built in the flood plain, so Disney could not tear down the old villas and replace them with just anything. The new plan reduces the units' ground-level "footprint" from 340 square feet to 84 square feet each by eliminating the first-floor living space. Consequently, the new buildings will be even more treehouse-like, supported by sets of pilings.

The South Florida Water Management District approved the plan Feb. 4.
 

gabroccoli

Member
I hope this happens. I remember staying in the treehouses when I was a kid. It didn't feel like you were in WDW. Secluded from the rest of the world.
 

DiPSU224

Member
We saw them back in 2005 the first time we took the boat from POR to DTD. Being a "Disney geek" I was excited to finally see them in person. They seemed so eerie. This one was in excellent condition compared to one further down the canal that had a tree still laying ontop of it.

treehouse2.jpg


I hope to get a chance to stay in ones in the future if they're redone.
 

jt04

Well-Known Member
For me the best part about this will be that it gives Disney the chance to restore this area after all the storm damage. I am convinced it will be more environmentally sound and beautiful to look at for both the guests in the tree houses and the folks passing by in the boats. Disney has a chance here to produce a facility that showcases some of the most visionary concepts in environmental technology and future housing technology without sacrificing luxury. Should be fun to see what they do with this. :)
 

WDWFigment

Well-Known Member
Thanks for the Sentinel article, but this news broke about a week or two ago. There's another thread with a bunch of permits and additional information, if anyone is interested.
 
Stayed in them as a kid, great memories. Remember feeling a million miles away from everything, while being really only ten minutes away. Every year my wife and I rent a boat at DTD and pass them, bringing back childhood memories.

The other year as we passed one, what must have been one of the female castmembers could clearly be seen in what can only be described as very sexy underwear, parading on the balcony. I nearly crashed the boat :eek:

As I said, such wonderfull memories :D

:wave:
 

doop

Well-Known Member
Never stayed in them, but I remember seeing them as an option on our 1995 planning video, and thought that they would be a cool place to stay. Thanks for the article.
 

lcsrig

Member
Updated treehouses would be so cool! Haven't you ever wanted to stay in the Swiss Family Robinson treehouse?? I beg my DH every year to please build me a treehouse!
 

Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.

Back
Top Bottom