I must admit, the Poly DVC has me pretty confused on the DVC strategy.
1- the bungalows have a point cost that must exclude the vast majority of DVC owners. Like a grand villa, but they invested so much in them it just does not make sense. Grand villas at least used the general structures of the underlying DVC property. So they poured money into a product most cannot use.
2- with only studios, they created an entire DVC of "nicer" hotel rooms. I realize studios are a key part of DVC but to make that the only real option for most owners? Strange.
3- they built all those studios "on the cheap" by reusing existing structures but at $160 per point priced it like a total premium new property. They went cheap on the product most will use and poured money into a product almost no one can afford point wise. It just feels like a raw deal to me? The margin on this DVC must be off the charts for them.
4- they built so many studios, it would appear getting one at 7 months will not be difficult. Given it is the only real option at this DVC point wise, why own there? You could get the main product there using any DVC points. I thought it would be bungalows as the draw but they are so expensive point wise a very small percentage will own there for that reason.
5- you could try ajoining studios if you wanted more room at twice the point cost but that setup will not give you a kitchen or table to eat at and just two real beds and will give you 4 showers with two pull puts where you still need to share the room to sleep more then 4. A somewhat bizarre setup to me.
The whole thing just appears strange to me. After BLT and VGF, I thought DVC had a certain strategy for the deluxe resorts on the monorail but this one just appears totally off from a sales perspective.
Perhaps there are just a ton of studio people in DVC and this is their monorail resort of choice (even though owning there appears optional to me - I think cheaper resort points would give them the same access).
It is a great resort and I totally understand people that love it for that reason. The DVC at this resort, however, appears to be th strangest property in the DVC system. I guess Disney will find out if it works for people. Some times "different" can attract a new audience.
My real fear is DVC is "stuck" with a very high point $ cost and are "shrinking" DVC rooms so they can lower point usage amounts to make a one week stay appear "reasonable" as a buyin cost at $160 per pt. That would stink.
1- the bungalows have a point cost that must exclude the vast majority of DVC owners. Like a grand villa, but they invested so much in them it just does not make sense. Grand villas at least used the general structures of the underlying DVC property. So they poured money into a product most cannot use.
2- with only studios, they created an entire DVC of "nicer" hotel rooms. I realize studios are a key part of DVC but to make that the only real option for most owners? Strange.
3- they built all those studios "on the cheap" by reusing existing structures but at $160 per point priced it like a total premium new property. They went cheap on the product most will use and poured money into a product almost no one can afford point wise. It just feels like a raw deal to me? The margin on this DVC must be off the charts for them.
4- they built so many studios, it would appear getting one at 7 months will not be difficult. Given it is the only real option at this DVC point wise, why own there? You could get the main product there using any DVC points. I thought it would be bungalows as the draw but they are so expensive point wise a very small percentage will own there for that reason.
5- you could try ajoining studios if you wanted more room at twice the point cost but that setup will not give you a kitchen or table to eat at and just two real beds and will give you 4 showers with two pull puts where you still need to share the room to sleep more then 4. A somewhat bizarre setup to me.
The whole thing just appears strange to me. After BLT and VGF, I thought DVC had a certain strategy for the deluxe resorts on the monorail but this one just appears totally off from a sales perspective.
Perhaps there are just a ton of studio people in DVC and this is their monorail resort of choice (even though owning there appears optional to me - I think cheaper resort points would give them the same access).
It is a great resort and I totally understand people that love it for that reason. The DVC at this resort, however, appears to be th strangest property in the DVC system. I guess Disney will find out if it works for people. Some times "different" can attract a new audience.
My real fear is DVC is "stuck" with a very high point $ cost and are "shrinking" DVC rooms so they can lower point usage amounts to make a one week stay appear "reasonable" as a buyin cost at $160 per pt. That would stink.