Just got back from an impromptu long weekend at Port Orleans Riverside with my two young sons.
My wife and I hadn't stayed there in 10 years and we were reminded why we loved that visit so much. And in strolling the grounds, I was also finally able to put my finger on why Saratoga Springs is such a monumental disappointment to me.
As a SSR owner (and a BWV and VWL) I'm entitled to make at least one criticism here without everyone going bananas, so bear with me.
Here it is: Road and parking lot placement. Ill-conceived, often moronic, placement of the roads and parking lots at SSR.
Have you ever walked through Port Orleans Riverside? You should because despite its "moderate" classification I think it's one the best themed and landscape resorts on Disney property. It also has a lot in common with SSR: They both are located on the same river. They both feature a series of satellite buildings in which the rooms face outside. They are both sprawling properties.
Yet Port Orleans has a quaint, communal, feel in which you never feel disconnected from the main resort even though some rooms are probably a quarter mile away. Why? The main access roads to all the buildings, as well as all of the unsightly parking lots, ring the outside of the resort – leaving the "inside" grounds as one contiguous, magnificently themed, piece of property. Strolling the grounds is truly a transporting experience.
How could the famed Imagineers, working with such a similar piece of land, have overlooked this very simple but brilliant piece of design when planning SSR? How could they have designed their showcase DVC property with roads cutting throughout the complex and parking lots disconnecting all the buildings? The end result is that there are no "inside" grounds. They've been replaced by a sea of concrete, busses and cars. And walking to the resort from your room is anything but transporting, unless you count being transported to an apartment complex.
Consider for a moment how different, how much better, the SSR experience would be if the parking lots and roads we're simply placed on the outside of the property: The buildings would be closer together, and the inside would consist of nothing but trees, trails, and lawns, where your kids could run to the pool without the risk of being run over. What a heartbreaking missed opportunity.
There, it's off my chest. Sorry to bum anyone out, but ever since we've stayed at SSR I've been trying to put my finger on what's "off" about this resort compared to other Disney resorts and, by jove, I think that's it.
My wife and I hadn't stayed there in 10 years and we were reminded why we loved that visit so much. And in strolling the grounds, I was also finally able to put my finger on why Saratoga Springs is such a monumental disappointment to me.
As a SSR owner (and a BWV and VWL) I'm entitled to make at least one criticism here without everyone going bananas, so bear with me.
Here it is: Road and parking lot placement. Ill-conceived, often moronic, placement of the roads and parking lots at SSR.
Have you ever walked through Port Orleans Riverside? You should because despite its "moderate" classification I think it's one the best themed and landscape resorts on Disney property. It also has a lot in common with SSR: They both are located on the same river. They both feature a series of satellite buildings in which the rooms face outside. They are both sprawling properties.
Yet Port Orleans has a quaint, communal, feel in which you never feel disconnected from the main resort even though some rooms are probably a quarter mile away. Why? The main access roads to all the buildings, as well as all of the unsightly parking lots, ring the outside of the resort – leaving the "inside" grounds as one contiguous, magnificently themed, piece of property. Strolling the grounds is truly a transporting experience.
How could the famed Imagineers, working with such a similar piece of land, have overlooked this very simple but brilliant piece of design when planning SSR? How could they have designed their showcase DVC property with roads cutting throughout the complex and parking lots disconnecting all the buildings? The end result is that there are no "inside" grounds. They've been replaced by a sea of concrete, busses and cars. And walking to the resort from your room is anything but transporting, unless you count being transported to an apartment complex.
Consider for a moment how different, how much better, the SSR experience would be if the parking lots and roads we're simply placed on the outside of the property: The buildings would be closer together, and the inside would consist of nothing but trees, trails, and lawns, where your kids could run to the pool without the risk of being run over. What a heartbreaking missed opportunity.
There, it's off my chest. Sorry to bum anyone out, but ever since we've stayed at SSR I've been trying to put my finger on what's "off" about this resort compared to other Disney resorts and, by jove, I think that's it.