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- Feb 11, 2007
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- 17,547
There's a walkway bridge going over the street to connect portions of DTD.
LINK
But nothing in the parks.
Yup, that's been around for at least a decade...also leads to the Disneyland Hotel.
There's a walkway bridge going over the street to connect portions of DTD.
LINK
But nothing in the parks.
The part I am questioning is the idea of areas of land being " not suitable for construction." To the best of my knowledge, unless there is a sink hole, the difference between swamp land and buildable land in FL is elevation. I have heard in the past that Disney can build on 2/3 of their property, and have currently built on about 1/3. Most development companies have the ability to declare which areas they are going to leave as preserved, so I would think that they could swap one area for the other. I find it hard to believe that they are land locked in any capacity.
During the next 10 years, the Districts development will be directed to those areas identified as suitable in the above analysis. The largest areas of suitable land are located west of Animal Kingdom, between World Drive and I-4 between Osceola Parkway and US 192, around Lake Mable, north of the Magnolia Golf Course, east of the Magic Kingdom parking lot, and west of Disneys Hollywood Studios.
The part I am questioning is the idea of areas of land being " not suitable for construction." To the best of my knowledge, unless there is a sink hole, the difference between swamp land and buildable land in FL is elevation. I have heard in the past that Disney can build on 2/3 of their property, and have currently built on about 1/3. Most development companies have the ability to declare which areas they are going to leave as preserved, so I would think that they could swap one area for the other. I find it hard to believe that they are land locked in any capacity.
Thanks to both of you for the excellent info. I guess I am still just having trouble with the concept of "unsuitable". I am a FL CGC, and most of my work is custom residential additions. I have built a few new homes here, but no big commercial.
My trouble stems from--
Disney excavated the seven seas lagoon-- and elevated the ground around it for future resorts and whatever supporting structures they may require. How can the Poly be on suitable ground, when about 200 yds away there is ground that is seemingly bottomless? Especially considering that the entire area was constructed. I would think there would be great concern that the poly would sink into the lagoon, not to mention what could happen to the contemporary. Could it be that during the original construction, since done when costs were so much lower, Dis was willing to spend what it takes to sure the pilings and now are not? I guess this wouldn't be a surprise, and would make more sense since it would make the statement that all ground around seven seas is the same. This I could believe.
But then there is the GF DVC-- which is basically the SSR buildings. Why do they not have a problem? Maybe the sinking pilings story is not true?
I don't know.
An underground aquifer ? You would think there would have been a sink hole by now.
AFAIK, it all depends on where the bedrock is. Perhaps it turns out that the MK, Poly and GF sit on a bedrock shelf, but that other area is off the shelf and they must go much deeper to support it?
T
Hmm...maybe make Star Tours a little more useful...board a Star Speeder, and have a virtual trip to Tatooine, while actually being moved across the road...
You know...kind of like the upcoming Hogwarts Express.![]()
They said Walt was daft to build a theme park on a swamp. But he built it all the same, just to show them. It sank into the swamp. So he built a second one. That sank into the swamp. So he built a third. That burned down, fell over, then sank into the swamp. But the fourth one stayed up.
They said Walt was daft to build a theme park on a swamp. But he built it all the same, just to show them. It sank into the swamp. So he built a second one. That sank into the swamp. So he built a third. That burned down, fell over, then sank into the swamp. But the fourth one stayed up.
Okay-- but no singing! You're not going into a song while I'm around.
If you look at google maps, you can see a small canal/water way south east of lma and curves up to the parking area. One would think the road could be moved to follow the contour of the water way, crossing it further down the canal and still link into the parking entrance(preserving the flow). Allowing them to build within the contour of the water way. That seems relatively easy, compared to deconstructing current park attractions. If they aren't going to do that, there has to be a compelling reason.
If a cars area is planned, I think LMA could be an easy re-theme to fit in.
Is this a song reference that I'm not catching?
Yes, but as discussed above, that land is on the "unsuitable" list for building on.
You must never have watched Monty Python and the Holy Grail...
Thanks to both of you for the excellent info. I guess I am still just having trouble with the concept of "unsuitable". I am a FL CGC, and most of my work is custom residential additions. I have built a few new homes here, but no big commercial.
My trouble stems from--
Disney excavated the seven seas lagoon-- and elevated the ground around it for future resorts and whatever supporting structures they may require. How can the Poly be on suitable ground, when about 200 yds away there is ground that is seemingly bottomless? Especially considering that the entire area was constructed. I would think there would be great concern that the poly would sink into the lagoon, not to mention what could happen to the contemporary. Could it be that during the original construction, since done when costs were so much lower, Dis was willing to spend what it takes to sure the pilings and now are not? I guess this wouldn't be a surprise, and would make more sense since it would make the statement that all ground around seven seas is the same. This I could believe.
But then there is the GF DVC-- which is basically the SSR buildings. Why do they not have a problem? Maybe the sinking pilings story is not true?
I don't know.
An underground aquifer ? You would think there would have been a sink hole by now.
That was basically my point Doc.
It seems to be low hanging fruit....so if they aren't going to build on it, there must be a compelling reason why. It's listed as unsuitable....and if there was a way to make it suitable for less money than tearing down existing stuff, they'd probably go for it.
From what I was told DHS could expand to 175 acers. Expansion would be in the cast member parking lot