sachilles
DVC coming to this space soon
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2013
- Messages
- 2,541
There has been a bit of discussion lately on this topic in several threads in this section. Trying to centralize it a bit in hopes of not derailing the main premise of the others.
I'm curious what folks expectations are from the Florida property, and I'm curious what your frequency of visit is.
In the recent years, we've seen the completion of New Fantasyland. Avatar land at the MK has begun. Closing attractions at DHS has lead to rumors of Pixar and Star Wars related additions/substitutions.
I see a few scenarios. Disney adding attractions where none existed previous. Disney removing attractions and replacing them with more than were in the area before. Disney removing one attraction, and replacing it with another for a zero sum gain. Disney removing an attraction with short term plans to replace it with anything...leaving the space vacant.
My opinion, expansions are ideal, as they don't impact the current guest for the most part. They take away little from the current guest experience to put in place. However, when completed they represent additional operating costs. If money were no object, this what folks would want to see, constant new content without losing old content. At some point the place would become too big and run out of space to develop. It costs a lot of money, and you likely don't bring in enough additional people short term to see a real return on the investment.
Next you have the scenario where attractions are removed, and in their place attractions are built with a gain in customer capacity. This is ideal for the company, as it likely makes things more efficient to operate. The end result is more people in the same amount of space and labor. The downside is that during construction, you are losing capacity in a large way. However when complete the investment can justify itself.
Next you have the scenario of zero sum gain. One attraction removed and replaced with something of similar capacity. Likely happening when the original attraction becomes tired and a maintenance nightmare. While it may not increase capacity on paper, increased reliability might be an upside, if the older attraction has a lot of downtime to age/maintenance. Again you lose capacity during construction, however when it is reopened, you have something "new" to entice guests.
Additionally I think it can be argued to remove attractions and replace them with higher quality attractions yet less capacity. IE it serves less people, but the theme is far better etc.
Lastly, you just shut the doors on an attraction. Replace it with nothing.
I anticipate visiting every 2 years, at about 7 days per visit.
My opinion, is that large projects are unreasonable to expect to happen concurrently. It requires a lot of resources, planning and they can impact the guest experience. I do think you can see some overlap.
New Fantasyland opened in full right about when Avatarland started. I think we will see a large expansion at DHS as Avatarland is approaching completion(and Disney Springs is completed). I think we will see minor changes short term at DHS in the interim. I'm betting we see something big happen to Epcot after the DHS big project.
As a result I think folks can expect something new on the large scale every three years. Those that visit every year will likely see something new every visit, but not always something large.
My last visit was was May 2013, and I will be there late April 2015. In 2013, I found New Fantasyland open, but with construction walls for 7DMT.
On this visit, will find Disney Springs to be vastly different but not completed. I will find walls where Avatarland is to be. I will find an expanded hub at MK. I will not find a hat. I'll get to ride 7DMT, but not the back lot tour.
Many rides will be new to us, as my son is still young, but now tall enough to ride things he could not on his previous visit.
What is reasonable for you?
I expect when I visit every two years: Two new attractions(one a ride, one some other type of experience), a new eating experience, a new show, an option for newly refurbished lodging. I expect to go off-peak when crowds are smaller. With that I expect at least three rides to be in refurb mode. I expect to find one to develop a maintenance issue. I expect a 7 day visit, with 6 of those in the parks.
I expect sore feet. I expect to burn as many calories as I consume. I expect to have a buzz at least one evening. I expect to be $5k poorer. I expect to whine about the heat at least one day and the rain another day.
I'm curious what folks expectations are from the Florida property, and I'm curious what your frequency of visit is.
In the recent years, we've seen the completion of New Fantasyland. Avatar land at the MK has begun. Closing attractions at DHS has lead to rumors of Pixar and Star Wars related additions/substitutions.
I see a few scenarios. Disney adding attractions where none existed previous. Disney removing attractions and replacing them with more than were in the area before. Disney removing one attraction, and replacing it with another for a zero sum gain. Disney removing an attraction with short term plans to replace it with anything...leaving the space vacant.
My opinion, expansions are ideal, as they don't impact the current guest for the most part. They take away little from the current guest experience to put in place. However, when completed they represent additional operating costs. If money were no object, this what folks would want to see, constant new content without losing old content. At some point the place would become too big and run out of space to develop. It costs a lot of money, and you likely don't bring in enough additional people short term to see a real return on the investment.
Next you have the scenario where attractions are removed, and in their place attractions are built with a gain in customer capacity. This is ideal for the company, as it likely makes things more efficient to operate. The end result is more people in the same amount of space and labor. The downside is that during construction, you are losing capacity in a large way. However when complete the investment can justify itself.
Next you have the scenario of zero sum gain. One attraction removed and replaced with something of similar capacity. Likely happening when the original attraction becomes tired and a maintenance nightmare. While it may not increase capacity on paper, increased reliability might be an upside, if the older attraction has a lot of downtime to age/maintenance. Again you lose capacity during construction, however when it is reopened, you have something "new" to entice guests.
Additionally I think it can be argued to remove attractions and replace them with higher quality attractions yet less capacity. IE it serves less people, but the theme is far better etc.
Lastly, you just shut the doors on an attraction. Replace it with nothing.
I anticipate visiting every 2 years, at about 7 days per visit.
My opinion, is that large projects are unreasonable to expect to happen concurrently. It requires a lot of resources, planning and they can impact the guest experience. I do think you can see some overlap.
New Fantasyland opened in full right about when Avatarland started. I think we will see a large expansion at DHS as Avatarland is approaching completion(and Disney Springs is completed). I think we will see minor changes short term at DHS in the interim. I'm betting we see something big happen to Epcot after the DHS big project.
As a result I think folks can expect something new on the large scale every three years. Those that visit every year will likely see something new every visit, but not always something large.
My last visit was was May 2013, and I will be there late April 2015. In 2013, I found New Fantasyland open, but with construction walls for 7DMT.
On this visit, will find Disney Springs to be vastly different but not completed. I will find walls where Avatarland is to be. I will find an expanded hub at MK. I will not find a hat. I'll get to ride 7DMT, but not the back lot tour.
Many rides will be new to us, as my son is still young, but now tall enough to ride things he could not on his previous visit.
What is reasonable for you?
I expect when I visit every two years: Two new attractions(one a ride, one some other type of experience), a new eating experience, a new show, an option for newly refurbished lodging. I expect to go off-peak when crowds are smaller. With that I expect at least three rides to be in refurb mode. I expect to find one to develop a maintenance issue. I expect a 7 day visit, with 6 of those in the parks.
I expect sore feet. I expect to burn as many calories as I consume. I expect to have a buzz at least one evening. I expect to be $5k poorer. I expect to whine about the heat at least one day and the rain another day.