As to 1BRs:
The pre-AKV resorts, OKW, HHI. VB, BWV, BCV, BRV, and SSR all originally limited occupancy to 4* in the 1BRs. Sometime near the mid-2000's, exactly when is an unknown because
DVC began doing it without making any announcement, DVC started allowing five in a 1BR as long as the members provided their own bedding for the fifth.
Then in 2007-09 came AKV, first Jambo and then Kidani, and both, except for the value rooms, added a sleeper chair in the living room of the 1BR (except for the values) and thus allowed 5 with sleeping spaces for all five.VGC and BLT came next, with VGC retaining the 4-person 1BR set-up while BLT added the sleeper chair. OKW added the sleeper chair during a 2010-11 refurb.Aulani opened in 2011 with the traditional 4-sleeping spaces in the 1BR. In 2012, VGF opened and added a pull down Murphy bed from the cabinet beneath the TV as a fifth sleeping space in the 1BR. In 2017, CCV opened with only 4-sleeping spaces and allows only 4 in a 1BR (the 1BRs are smaller than those at any other resort). Riviera has the Murphy bed addition like VGF.
The result: you can put 5 in a 1BR everywhere except CCV, but the fifth sleeping space is provided only at AKV, BLT, VGF, OKW and Riviera; at the others you need to provide your own bedding for the fifth.
As to Studios:
All studios allowed only 4 until VGF opened in 2012, and added the Murphy bed that pulls down from the cabinet below the TV. Poly and Riviera studios (other than Tower) both also have had the Murphy bed since opening and allow 5. During refurbs that occurred between 2014 and 2018, BRV, BWV, and BCV, all added the Murphy bed to their studios.
Result: VGF, Poly, BRV, BWV, BCV, and Riviera all allow 5 in a studios and have the extra bed for the fifth, the other resorts do not.
Be aware that adding a fifth sleeping space to the studios at resorts that still only allow four is a controversial issue. Some would like that but many of us have serious misgivings. The reason: it just adds further to the oversell of studios that began in 2010. It was then, during the Great Recession, that DVD significantly lowered the the minimum points a new purchaser could purchase from a160 to 100 and at times to 50 and 75, and that issue continues today. Meanwhile, at about the same time, DVD began a process of greatly raising new purchase prices to the effect that over the last 10-11 years, prices have increased greater than 100%,while during most of that time the economy was stagnant at best, and wages increased little. DVD also added new resorts with substantially higher point-per-night costs than the older resorts, further increasing the percentage of purchasers who could purchase only enough points to get studios. Adding to the problem, DVD added a lot of bungalows and cabins with highly excessive point costs, for which few could afford to buy enough points to use, but those gave DVD the oppurtunity to sell those extra points to those who could afford only cheaper rooms such as studios. And to top it all off, DVD added a fifth sleeping space to studios that previously allowed only four to further cause an oversell of studios.
The result of DVD's actions in the last ten years is the problem that now exists, in that it is becoming more and more difficult from year to year for members to reserve many of the studios even at 11-months out. And how does the modern DVD/DVC react in trying to fix the problems DVD has created? Not by deciding to raise minimum point purchase requirements and lower new purchase prices, and not by deciding to build a huge number of studios in the new resorts. Instead, its suggested way of fixing the problem is to create improper new
point charts that significantly raise the total points that apply to reserving rooms during many years, thus decreasing the value of the members' points.
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