roozlilone
"Por favor mantengase alejado"
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2004
- Messages
- 775




call them now!!!!!!!!! I was told this morning that florrs 4, 5 and 6 are closed as of yesterday!!!
Lori
The AKL is not going away; it's just that rooms on the 5th and 6th floor are being converted into Animal Kingdom Villas for DVC. A new set of DVC buildings (Kidani Village) will be build next to AKL, opening in 2009, with an expansion of the savannah and the addition of some new and different animals.
This is similar to the DVC expansions at WL/VWL, BC/BCV and BWI/BWV.
The AKL is not going away; it's just that rooms on the 5th and 6th floor are being converted into Animal Kingdom Villas for DVC. A new set of DVC buildings (Kidani Village) will be build next to AKL, opening in 2009, with an expansion of the savannah and the addition of some new and different animals.
This is similar to the DVC expansions at WL/VWL, BC/BCV and BWI/BWV.
Will the AKL lodge be the same?
Why would the Villas take away from the experience at WL or BC or AKL, etc.
Just curious.![]()
My personal opinion. We were frequent guests at the WL and BC prior to the addition of the villas. What we liked about both is that they never felt over crowded even when they were full. They were quiet and peaceful.
When they added the villas to WL and BC, they did not expand any of the services. Now the restaurants, the pools, the lobby, the front desk, all have to handle 100s of additional guests. It was just too much for the resort to absorb.
Now AKL at least with the new building will have its own check in area, restaurants and theme pool. So hopefully they learned from the previous mistakes.
I am sure guests who were not frequent guests to WL or BC prior to the villas did not notice the differences but guests who were frequent before the addition of the villas did notice the difference.
Personally I would rather stay at an AKL without the villas because that was the original idea. In my opinion the villas take away from the whole idea by making it more residential, and less unique as a resort... sorry if this sounds confusing...
~Simon![]()
I absolutely agree. Right now, I have no desire to stay at AKL anymore. I think it's going to be way too crowded.![]()
This question might have been asked already but...
why are they remodeling existing rooms to become DVC when they are going to build an entire other wing to be DVC only? Looking at that map it seems like the whole resort will at sometime this year be under construction. Aren't they losing money right now by turning people away and giving upgrades? Why not just build the other wing and leave everything in the main building as is?
It doesn't make any sense to me. BTW I love AKL and we were going to stay there again this year but they couldn't accomodate our needs.
why are they remodeling existing rooms to become DVC when they are going to build an entire other wing to be DVC only?
Will there be food service of any type in the new DVC building?
Restaurant?
Food Court?
Carry out items?
How bout a gift shop?
Or, will everyone have to come to the AKL for these things on property?
Just wondering...
-mary
Keep in mind, I'm speculating, but speculating based on good info we've gotten on the dis boards and elsewhere:
1) AKL's occupancy rates were the lowest in the Deluxe category, especially since the Contemp refurb, and possibly the lowest on Disney property (I've heard one or two of the mods might be lower...not sure).
2) AKL's deluxe rooms were the lowest occupancy rooms at the resort
DVC needed something to sell, relatively quickly. AKL was always slated for DVC, and the "foundation" for DVC was put in place during construction. They also had an occupancy problem. So, after careful consideration, the suits decided to solve 2 problems at once: Remodel existing rooms with lower occupancy rates in order to have something to sell quickly AND build out the previously planned AKV stand alone building.
Edit: I know the map makes it LOOK like the whole resort is under construction, but it's really only the 5th (a full floor) and 6th (a "mini-floor" which houses about 15 to 20 rooms and the concierge lounge) floors in the sections they outline.