Cabius
More Disney-obsessed than is healthy.
- Joined
- Nov 22, 2017
- Messages
- 1,574
The cabins don't need to have wheels to be a temporary structure! The current cabins are the 2nd version of cabins at fort wilderness, the new DVC cabins will be the 3rd version. It is likely there will be a 4th version within the next 20-30 years prior to the CFW contract's end date. Disney literally removes the old cabins roughly every 20 years when they're done with them, and then sells them! Disney would not legally be able to sell them in 20+ years if DVC chose to use a deed at CFW!
It doesn't need to be an RV or have wheels to be a "temporary structure"
I think about in these terms: what would happen if, in 25 years, one or more of these structures were destroyed or sold, and replaced with new ones?
- With the new legal model... nothing! Owners have a right to use the resort facilities, and swapping out one physical structure for another is no more complicated than any other hard goods renovation.
- With the old legal model... it's complicated! Owners held a deeded interest in physical property that was carted away and destroyed, sold, etc. New physical property now sites on the same land. Can Disney just sell off "my" unit and replace it with a new one? If "my" units gets burned to the ground, what rights do I have?
From that perspective, it isn't about whether it has wheels, or a chassis, or was manufactured on- or off-site. (I mean, that may also matter; I know both State and Federal law care specifically about chassis placement and roofing materials, though I think that's primarily for the purpose of financing.)
It REALLY matters whether there is a world in which they want to replace the cabins in the next 50 years.
- This could be because it makes more sense for Disney to replace them at some point, as they've done twice already.
- It could be because small standalone structures are much more susceptible to a total loss event -- fire, major storm damage -- than a huge building that is more likely to be partially damaged than destroyed outright.
But in either case, the new legal model provides clarity and protection both for Disney and for DVC Owners, while allowing for the flexibility to renovate the physical inventory in whatever way makes sense to them decades in the future.
Did they absolutely have to shift to a RTU model for this? Probably not. But (1) it de-risks the relationship for all parties involved, and (2) it's specifically rooted in the type of property they are selling.
It's impossible to argue against the claim of secret insider knowledge, so we'll just have to slog through some level of epistemic closure for few months or years. But there's really a clear, Occam's Razor explanation for why DVD would pursue this approach for this property, independently of any desire to further muddy the waters of an already complicated product.