Come all, Come one...And feel Welcome
The Walt Disney Company is one of, if not the greatest and largest company in the world when it comes to theme park and media entertainment nowadays. Disney was originally founded on October 16, 1923 by Walt and Roy O. Disney. Even though its' success is clear and the company has grown from animated shorts to full-feature films to theme park empire and media company, many choices made by the company are debatable, especially when it comes to the opinions of fans. Sometimes the company chose for cheap ways out instead of offering the quality, the world is expecting from them, often leaving masterplans unbuilt. Of course, we all have our own vision of how the Disney parks and the company should develop or should have developed. Questions like pleasing the mass by implementing popular franchises or staying true to a certain immersive theme often cause debates and split the fan base of the company. In this thread I'd like to share my vision of how I think the parks should have developed or could develop.
This is not necessarily a realistic vision, but primarily focuses on what could have been or could be. That's why I'm not only looking at what the existing resorts could be, but also at potential future locations for Disney Theme Park Resorts. If some ideas sound familiar, that is possible. I'm mostly inspired by plans that were once proposed for these locations, but were never built. But also sites like Ideal Buildout.BlogSpot.com and Imagineerland.Blogspot.com and our own WDWMagic Imagineers here on the threads come with great ideas or descriptions from time to time. One of the more recent ones that has truly inspired me is @MANEATINGWREATH with his Mirror Disneyland - An Alternate History thread, which you should definitely check out if you haven't already. In this thread I'd like to share my vision of the parks, but also open up the opportunity to discuss which choices Disney could or should have made, building our very own perfect Disney alter-reality.
So let's travel back to the year 1954. Walt Disney, one of the founders of The Walt Disney Company, has put aside his plans for a Mickey Mouse Park across his studio in Burbank. This park would have been a smaller, much more intimate theme park experience born from the wish to transport Guests to a world between worlds, the DisneyVerse. This Mickey Mouse Park would be an 8-acres park resembling small-town America in the early 20th Century, featuring a Town Square/Main Street area, a Western Village, a Farm, a Carnival and a scenic water body. Proposed attractions included a horse-drawn streetcar, a stern-wheeler riverboat, horse-drawn surreys and buckboards, a stagecoach wagon ride, a donkey pack train, various carnival rides, a canal boat ride, a space ship replica, a submarine ride and perhaps the most important one, the steam train ride. Why, you ask?
''well, it came about when my daughters when very young and I... Saturday was always the 'daddy's day' with the two daughters, so we started to try go some place a little different and I'd take them to the merry-go-round and I took them different places. As I'd sit there, they rode the merry-go-round and all these things...sit on a bench, eating peanuts, I felt that there should be something built, some kind of an amusement enterprise somewhere parents and the children could have fun together'' - Walt Disney after he was asked what inspired him to build Disneyland.
Mickey Mouse Park was designed to be a small, family-friendly park that would differ significantly from typical amusement parks of the era. It would offer grassy areas, picnic tables, water features and gentle rides that could be enjoyed by the whole family. The town square that was supposed to be the opening land and introduction to the park was modelled after Walt's childhood town, Marceline, Missouri. This would be built around a village green, with a railroad station at one end and the Town Hall at the other. The village green would have featured host benches, a bandstand, a drinking fountain, trees and shrubs.
''A place for people to sit and rest; mothers and grandmothers can watch over small children at play, while offering Guests somewhere to relax, cool off and feel invited.''
The train station would actually host the tracks of his narrow-gauge track steam train circling much of the park. The Town Hall would be the headquarters of the entire Mickey Mouse Park. Besides these two buildings, the street would have featured a fire station, a police station and a selection of shops including a drug store (with a soda fountain), a toy store, a toy repair shop, a magic shop, a hobby shop, a book store, a store for dollhouse furniture, a music store, a children's clothing store, a candy store and a functioning post office. The opera house would host a movie theatre. Scaping the area, would have been statues of Disney characters adding to the area's ambiance. Near the village, you would find a picturesque view over an island in the center of a large lake. Guests would have the opportunity to board a stern-wheeler riverboat and circle the island. However, the Wild West adventure craze at the time would prove the horse-drawn streetcar transporting Guests between the main village and a Western settlement to be much more popular. This settlement would feature a general store, a stagecoach wagon ride, a donkey pack train, a smaller movie theatre, a pony ring, as well as a frontier museum. From here, you could board horse-drawn surreys and buckboards that carry you to the old-fashioned farm and carnival-area of the park, filled with typical Midway stuff like roller-coasters and merry-go-rounds. Smaller proposals included a canal boat ride through Lilliputian land, featuring miniature-scaled models of a world for miniature-sized people, a mock spaceship that Guests could wander around, a submarine ride based on Jules Verne's visions of the deep seas, a haunted house walkthrough overlooking the village and a roller coaster-style ride that would race across a broken bridge.
Imagine yourself in 1954, sitting in front of your television together with your family. Suddenly, Walt Disney himself appears on the screen unveiling his plans which would become Disneyland through the Disneyland series. The show contained teasers for his park, as well as episodes representing life in one of the park's main sections: Adventureland, Tomorrowland, Fantasyland and Frontierland. Consequently, Davy Crockett and other pioneers of the Old West, and American history appeared in Frontierland. Similarly, 20,000 leagues under the Sea might be the focus of an evening spent in Adventureland, although a documentary or a true-life adventure film could also be possibly presented. Topics for Fantasyland would include either actual cartoons, and animated or documentaries, or documentaries on The Making Of or Behind the Scenes. Tomorrowland was an opportunity to the Disney staff to present cutting-edge science and technology, and to predict possible futures, such as futuristic automobiles and highways.
Not a year later, on July 17, 1955 Walt Disney previewed the park with a live television broadcast and the next day the park would open to the general public. The opening day event was an occasion known to Cast Members as ''Black Sunday'', because of the many problems the park experienced on the day. Trees were still being planted, the paint was still wet, the park was over-crowded, the park ran out of food and beverages, the asphalt on Main Street U.S.A. was still wet, many of the rides broke down, water fountains weren't working because of the plumbers' strike, a gas leak took place in Fantasyland, the Mark Twain Riverboat nearly capsized and sank in the first days and many negative reviews were published about the park.
''Why worry? If you've done the very best you can, worrying won't make it any better''
And that's exactly what Walt didn't do. Despite the shaky start, the park continued to grow and attract Guests from across the country and around the world. Nowadays, we have the Disneyland Resort in Anaheim, the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, the Tokyo Disney Resort, the Disneyland Resort in Paris, the Hong Kong Disneyland Resort and the Shanghai Disney Resort, making the company one of the largest theme park corporation in the world. Disney is known for amazing storytelling, immersive landscaping and impressive innovation when it comes to the technology, atmosphere, key beliefs and philosophy, which are often ground-breaking. This is why the invention of the audio animatronics and many other systems and formulas have become pin points in the history of theme parks.
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