So it's been like 2+ years since the ride closed, and these guys are still sitting in a field off Disney property. Not sure why they have not been scrapped, but they haven't. I was able to take this video with a drone.
Just looks to me like the trams are just going to turned back into trucks that will haul roll off containers. This isn't surprising or out of the ordinary as used trucks get repurposed all the time especially when they come from companies who maintained their equipment well.
btw I'd be singing a different tune if the trailing cars of the trams were on site as well but I seem to recall pictures of them getting scrapped.Oh wow. That never came across my mind. Maybe that is true, thanks for sharing.
Turns my stomach. The "production" aspect of Disney-MGM, streets of America, idealized 30's Hollywood and the backstage vibe are some of the core values that drew me towards the craft of design.
Turns my stomach. The "production" aspect of Disney-MGM, streets of America, idealized 30's Hollywood and the backstage vibe are some of the core values that drew me towards the craft of design.
I think it was mentioned they got new ones about half a year before closing?Didn't they receive new trams a few weeks before it was closed?
Exactly. Even though it was fake, it gave the feel of the Hollywood that never was, but you imagined it in your mind that way. You felt the SoA was really part of a back lot of a studio. I grew up in Brooklyn and of course had to take a picture on the steps of the brownstones when I first went to MGM in 1997. It looked real enough to me.Turns my stomach. The "production" aspect of Disney-MGM, streets of America, idealized 30's Hollywood and the backstage vibe are some of the core values that drew me towards the craft of design.
Don't worry that tour bridge will be demolished soon. There's not much of anything left. The building was well gutted when TSMM was put in.I know that time is long and gone, and never really worked well even in the beginning, but I loved the theme of the park.
I still get a lot of nostalgia just looking at the lone tour bridge remaining between Toy Story and Soundstage 4.
It gets me curious what remnants are still in the Toy Story buildings from their soundstage and taping days.
Turns my stomach. The "production" aspect of Disney-MGM, streets of America, idealized 30's Hollywood and the backstage vibe are some of the core values that drew me towards the craft of design.
Exactly. Even though it was fake, it gave the feel of the Hollywood that never was, but you imagined it in your mind that way. You felt the SoA was really part of a back lot of a studio. I grew up in Brooklyn and of course had to take a picture on the steps of the brownstones when I first went to MGM in 1997. It looked real enough to me.
Don't worry that tour bridge will be demolished soon. There's not much of anything left. The building was well gutted when TSMM was put in.
Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.