Let me ask you this. Are you constantly thinking all day, in the back of your mind when you visit Disneyland, man, I wish that freeway wasn't visible from the monorail?
More like - 'This is an attraction?'. Besides the FL/TL loops of the Monorail ride... its the most unglamorous ride on property. The majority of the ride is simply driving between buildings, or over backstage areas or the parking lot. Enjoy your ride into the 50s future over the back of house of Harbor house... and Harbor Blvd.. to be followed up by.. the walls of DCA.. Seriously, besides the FL and TL loops.. you have the ride over the esplanade and the rest is pretty bad show.
But to the topic - you again take your dismissive nature of the impact and use it to rewrite the facts in your mind. It doesn't matter how important or not the freeway view is to you.. that's what it is factually. And with the new monorail design forcing which side of the train you look out.. that half of the train pretty much gets forced fed that view.
It doesn't seem like Walt Disney had this huge, aching problem with it, since he first wanted to build Disneyland in Burbank next to his studios, which wasn't isolated either
The idea to commercialize the interest in his studio was not a DL concept - different ideas, different times.
Yes, he wanted more space and he didn't want outsiders looking into his park. But the man still enjoyed it. That's my point
Man you really got things on their head. Its not about outsiders looking in, it's about the outside INTRUDING on the show he was trying to create. And the man wasn't contempt to sit back and just enjoy what he had.. he was instead obsessive about how to IMPROVE it and not just be satisified. He built the park, and spent the next 13 years figuring out how to improve every aspect of it. He had limitations.. financial.. technological... skill.. and every week, every month, they worked to overcome those hurdles and improve upon what they did previously. Not just sitting back and going 'well, its good enough'. That drive for continual improvement and distaste for subpar is what built the Disney product and brand that the company and fans of complacency coast on now.
I understand, but I don't recall seeing any other off-property area while at the resort. I suppose I remember seeing a castle-like hotel for a few seconds while on the monorail, but it just didn't seem that intrusive. Idk, I suppose like others are saying, to each his own, but it seems to me you had to look for things from the outside world while on property
Or maybe as a first time visitor you were so overloaded with other things they didn't stand out to you. In the monorails now, the train seating was changed to a center line bench that forces what side of the train you look out of. It's impossible to miss that view if you are sitting on that side. And the worst offender inside the park, the west end of DCA.. you've already acknowledged is that way. On the rides, I'm sure you were focused on this whole new experience you had going on.
Same thing happens in WDW... when you are in EPCOT you are taken back by World Showcase.. it doesn't jump out at you on your first trip about those hotels beyond intruding on the sight lines either.
I'm not talking about the parks, although I don't remember seeing Harbor from Splash Mtn, which to me shows that Disney really has gone out of its way to ensure that nothing from the outside influences the magic at DL.
At DL? Pretty much.. but the context of the discussion was DLR.. the resort as a whole. DL is pretty well protected because it had those founding design principles.. but when they expanded to DLR.. they didn't mind it much attention.