While I've been an outspoken advocate of adults-only restaurants at WDW, I don't think adults-only sections of the resorts would be workable.
The only problem I have with kids at the resorts is the noise level, and I don't think that kids are any more of a noise problem than adults at the resorts; they're just noisy at different times and for different reasons than adults.
I've mostly found adults to be loud & unruly late at night, not so much kids.
That depends on the time of day.
Early morning times bring kids running, yelling, cheering, and generally being kids as they spend some of that energy we older folks both envy and resent on their way to the parks. YAY! for them, but for me, since I prefer to sleep past 7am when on vacation, not so much Yay.
Drunken fools, on the other hand, tend to be more nocturnal, as do "recreating" couples and congregating teens.
But personally, I don't care who you are, what you are, what age you are, or how harmless and friendly you are - loud in a hotel is rude.
I guess you don't travel much. Heck some hotels have entire floors only for adult female travelers. I've stayed at many hotels with kid only wings/floors, and that don't allow children into their restaurants after a certain time. It's not as uncommon as you might think for a certain demographic group to be seperated from others, by choice or otherwise.
I've never heard of that. Can you list a few that you've encountered? I'm curious to see how they work the whole thing.
I personally would not want to stay in a child free area even if me and DH went alone. Kids are amusing, and part of the fun of the place.
I can't say I have ever been disturbed by any noise at the resorts anyway...I guess I am just lucky too haha. It would not bother us even if we did get woke up here and there. Kids need to be allowed to just be kids. Adult hood comes soon enough. Soooo if any of you find yourselves my neighbors; tell the kiddies to holler away.
You're more than lucky - you've won the lottery.
I've never been in a hotel anywhere that didn't have some sort of noisy Guest - kids, adults, teens, parties, gatherings, whatever - somebody has always interrupted my sleep in the middle of the night, kept me awake late, or woken me up early.
From time to time, Disney tries to market to the childless adults market---Plesure island, the spas, etc.---but they rarely seem to get serious about it. They are in the process of abandoning PI as we speak.
My guess: unless and until resort occupancy drops a fair bit below the current 90%, I would not expect any changes in how resorts are booked/assigned. The only way around this would be if Disney could figure out how to charge such adults more money for the privilege.
I think you're right about Disney's half-hearted marketing to the childless market. I wonder if Disney management has been going through a similar argument to the one that goes on here any time somebody brings up the subject of any kind of child-free area at WDW, and the choppy execution of the policies comes from a tug of war behind the scenes.
I wouldn't expect any changes, either. While something is profitable, the only changes Disney tends to make is to expand it and wring every last penny out of it.