mshanson3121
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2015
- Messages
- 7,211
I read an article the other day about how American companies have been delaying investment in capital improvements for the last couple decades and that one day it's going to come back and bite them in the tushie. Disney has a crowd control problem because they have failed to invest in new capacity.
Take the Frozen ride that is coming to Epcot. It will be the most popular thing, since...the last Frozen thing, and Disney has chosen to put it in a building with a ride system of 900 people per hour. By comparison, Universe of Energy can carry 2400 people per hour for a 40 min attraction and Horizons could carry 2700 for 15 minutes, and World of Motion was king at 3240 people per hour on another 15 minutes. So while you are waiting too long for a 3-5 minute ride wondering why there are so many people, remember when Disney used to design like that. Sure those rides might have gotten stagnant, but that's not an excuse for changing from ride systems that would carry 2000+ people to ones that are significantly less, and are so much shorter.
Disney can control crowds by having people on rides, watching shows, etc. But they let attractions stagnate, shutter things, reduce capacity, reduce ride times, empty queues via fastpass and then whine they have no other choice but raise prices.
And for real Disney Geeks, I can't remember which one, but there is a series of books with raw interviews with Disney old timers, called Walt's People. One of the later one has an interview with Dick Nunis, who talked about the major capacity initiatives the Magic Kingdom had to take in the 70s when they realized that more people were coming than they anticipated, and they had to start building more attractions...yesterday. Different philosophies.
^^^This. They would be far better off to look at ways of increasing capacity.
All of that said - we were there in the summer, on days rated at an 8 & 9 for crowds (the days right before July 4). And honestly, it wasn't nearly as bad as everyone on this board had scared me into thinking it would be. The only places that were bad were the bottleneck areas, specifically in MK by Peter Pan's flight. The rest of it was really not bad at all. I will say Animal Kingdom by far felt the most crowded of them, though there were only a couple really bad bottleneck areas. One was up by the Finding Nemo show area.